4.7 Article

Late Cenozoic geological development of the south Voring margin, mid-Norway

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 9, Pages 1789-1803

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2010.09.001

Keywords

Norwegian Sea; Voring Plateau; Continental slope; Naust Formation; Pliocene; Pleistocene; Submarine slide

Funding

  1. Norwegian Research Council [175969/S30]
  2. Norwegian Deepwater Programme-SEABED III consortium

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Late Cenozoic seismic stratigraphy of the Wring continental margin has been studied in detail, with emphasis on the geological development of the Naust Formation deposited during the last 3 million years. The Kai Formation (15-3 Ma) comprises mainly biogenic ooze deposited in the More and Voring Basins. In Naust time, there was a marked increase in supply of sediments from the inner shelf areas and the western part of the Scandinavian mountain range, and glaciers expanded to the shelf and reached the shelf edge several times during the last 1.5-2 million years. During early to mid Naust time the shelf was widened by westerly prograding sediment units, but for a long period the shallowest part of the Helland-Hansen Arch (HHA) formed a barrier preventing glacially derived debris from being distributed farther west. West of the HHA, mainly stratified marine and glacimarine sediments were deposited. A substantial part of these sediments were transported by the north-flowing Norwegian Atlantic Current, which redistributed suspended particles from ice streams, rivers, coastal erosion and seabed winnowing. After burial of the crest of the HHA at c. 0.5 Ma, glacial debris and slide deposits were also deposited west of this high. In the north, massive units of glacial debris were distributed beyond the crest of the HHA, also in mid Naust time, thinning westwards and interfingering with fine-grained sediments on the lower slope. The Sklinnadjupet Slide, inferred to be c. 250,000 years old, corresponds in age with an earlier huge slide in the Storegga area. An elongated area of uneven seabed topography previously interpreted as diapirs (Vigrid diapirs) on the slope west of the HHA is shown to be formed by ooze eruption from the crest of the arch and submarine sliding. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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