Abstract

Strong tidal currents in the Pentland Firth separating NE Scotland and Orkney have stripped recent seafloor sediments revealing geological structures in parts of the Devonian Orcadian Basin that are otherwise limited to narrow coastal outcrops. Here we interpret and analyse a 220 km2 high-resolution bathymetric dataset and combine these findings with onshore aerial imagery, field observations, and photogrammetric Virtual Outcrop Models created from coastal outcrops. This approach allows a reappraisal of the structure, stratigraphy and tectonic evolution of the Orcadian Basin, and gives new insights into fold and fault structures developed at sub-seismic to reservoir scales. A major basin-scale Devonian structure – the Brough-Brims-Risa Fault – can be traced from Caithness to Hoy and has partitioned reactivation-related deformation in the Orcadian Basin during later deformation episodes. Carboniferous inversion-related folds formed during E-W shortening are mapped and correlated between Caithness and Orkney. These structures are cross-cut by widespread highly connected fracture networks formed by steeply-dipping ENE-WSW and subordinate WNW-ESE trending structures developed during Permian NW-SE transtensional rifting. The offshore dataset demonstrates the continuity and topology of structures related to superimposed rifting and basin inversion events across a much greater scale range than was hitherto possible. [end].

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