Abstract

New analyses of the palynological assemblages in 13 offshore wells on the Canadian margin and six on the West Greenland Margin, in conjunction with onshore data, have led to a new biostratigraphic framework for the Cretaceous–Cenozoic strata of the Labrador Sea – Davis Strait – Baffin Bay (Labrador–Baffin Seaway) region and the first broad biostratigraphic correlation of the Canadian and Greenland margins. This framework is based on 167 last occurrences and 18 local/regional peak/common-occurrence events for dinocysts, miospores, fungal spores and Azolla. Detailed biostratigraphic evidence has confirmed the following hiatuses: pre-Aptian in the Hopedale Basin; pre-Albian in the Saglek Basin; Albian–Turonian in some wells of the Hopedale Basin; Turonian–Santonian/Campanian in some areas; pre-Campanian and late Campanian – Thanetian on the Greenland Margin; late Maastrichtian and Danian in some wells of the Hopedale Basin and in the Saglek Basin; Selandian in part of the Hopedale Basin, in all the Saglek Basin wells and in two wells on the West Greenland Margin; late Ypresian and/or Lutetian on both sides; Oligocene to middle Miocene of considerable variability on both margins, with all of the Oligocene and the lower Miocene missing in all the West Greenland Margin wells; and middle to late Miocene on the western side. On the Canadian margin, the hiatuses can be partially matched with the five previously recognised regional unconformities; on the Greenland margin, however, the relationship to the five unconformities is more tenuous. Palynomorph assemblages show that most Aptian to Albian sediments were deposited in generally non-marine to marginal marine settings, interrupted by a short-lived shallow marine episode in the Aptian. A marine transgression started in the Cenomanian–Turonian and led to the most open-marine, oceanic conditions in the Campanian–Lutetian; shallowing probably started in the late Lutetian and continued into the Rupelian, when inner neritic and marginal marine palaeoenvironments predominated. Throughout the rest of the Cenozoic, inner neritic palaeoenvironments alternated with marginal marine conditions on the margins of the Labrador–Baffin Seaway. These observations broadly reflect the tectonic evolution of the seaway, with rift conditions prevailing from Aptian to Danian times, followed by drift through much of the Paleocene and Eocene, and post-drift from Oligocene to the present. Dinocysts indicate that climatic conditions in the Labrador–Baffin Seaway region were relatively temperate in the Cretaceous, but varied dramatically through the Cenozoic. The Danian was a time of increasingly warmer climate, a thermal maximum being reached around the Paleocene–Eocene boundary reflecting the global thermal event at this time. Warm to hot conditions prevailed throughout the Ypresian, but the climate began to cool in the Lutetian, a trend that accelerated through the Priabonian and Rupelian. Throughout the Neogene, temperatures generally declined, culminating in the Quaternary.

Highlights

  • Canada and Greenland are separated, from south to north, by the Labrador Sea, the Davis Strait, Baffin Bay, and the narrow Nares Strait (Fig. 1)

  • The observations made during this study support earlier findings that non-marine conditions prevailed during the Early Cretaceous on what is today the Labrador Margin (Gradstein & Williams 1976); this interpretation is based on the fact that many assemblages in this part of the section consist exclusively of miospores

  • A new biostratigraphic framework has been developed for the Aptian (Lower Cretaceous) to Pliocene–Pleistocene of the Labrador–Baffin Seaway

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Summary

Introduction

Canada and Greenland are separated, from south to north, by the Labrador Sea, the Davis Strait, Baffin Bay (referred to here collectively as the Labrador–Baffin Seaway), and the narrow Nares Strait (Fig. 1). A drift phase in the seaway, causing the Greenland Plate to rotate away from North America, was heralded by an episode of volcanic activity between 62 and 56 million years ago, perhaps resulting from the passage of the Icelandic mantle plume (Dam et al 1998a; Larsen et al 2016). This episode involved vast outpourings of basalt in central West Greenland and south-eastern Baffin Island. Until this time, Greenland was part of Laurasia, between about 55 and 35 million years ago it constituted a separate plate, and after 35 million years ago it became part of the North American Plate

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