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The West Spitsbergen Fold Belt: The result of Late Cretaceous-Palaeocene Greenland-Svalbard convergence?

✍ Scribed by Nikos Lyberis; Geoff Manby


Book ID
102846314
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
985 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
0072-1050

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✦ Synopsis


The West Spitsbergen Fold Belt, together with the Eurekan structures of northern Greenland and Ellesmere Island, are suggested to be the result of Late Cretaceous-Palaeocene intracontinental compressional tectonics. The Late Palaeozoic -Mesozoic rocks of western Spitsbergen are characterized by near-foreland deformation with ramp-flat, top-to-the east thrust trajectories, whereas structurally higher nappes involving Caledonian complexes are typified by more listric thrusts and mylonite zones. A minimum of40 km of shortening is estimated for the northern part of the West Spitsbergen Fold Belt. The axial trends in the West Spitsbergen and the North Greenland Eurekan fold belts parallel the principal fault zones which accommodated the separation of Greenland and Svalbard after Chron 25/24. In northern Greenland, north directed Eurekan thrusts associated with mylonites and cleavage formation represent at least 10 km of shortening. Between 50 and 100 km of shortening is estimated for the markedly arcuate Eurekan Fold Belt of Ellesmere Island, but the principal tectonic transport is eastwards. Kinematic reconstructions suggest that Svalbard was linked to North America before the opening of the Eurasian Basin and Norwegian -Greenland Sea. In the Late Cretaceous -Palaeocene interval, the relative motion between Greenland and North America was convergent across the Greenland -Svalbard margin, giving rise to the West Spitsbergen Fold Belt and the Eurekan structures of North Greenland.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Discussion of β€˜The West Spitsbergen Fold
✍ W. B. Harland; N. Lyberis; G. Manby πŸ“‚ Article πŸ“… 1995 πŸ› John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English βš– 551 KB

In their recent paper, Lyberis and Manby (1993a) argued, possibly following Hanish (1984), that the age of the deformation that affected the West Spitsbergen Orogen (Harland and Horsfield 1974) was Late Cretaceous, a view they have repeated elsewhere (e.g. Lyberis and Manby 1993b). The age of later