Abstract

In their recent paper, Loseth et al . (2013) propose a new model for the late Cenozoic evolution of the northern North Sea. They propose that during the early Pleistocene ( sensu ICS 2013), large volumes of sand were ejected from the Paleocene through the Eocene–Oligocene Hordaland Group, and deposited both as extrusive sand on the Pleistocene seafloor and as intrusive sand within the Oligocene section, c . 180 m below the seafloor. The paper builds on two earlier studies: (1) that by Loseth et al . (2012) in which the Pleistocene extrusive sand is presented in more detail; (2) that by Rodrigues et al . (2009) in which an experimental model related to such sand deposition is presented. The model of Loseth et al . (2013) is illustrated by a seismic section in their figure 12, showing intrusive sands within the Oligocene and extrusive sands within the Pleistocene. Details of this model, such as feeder dykes and blowout fissures that create ditches, are shown in their figure 8 (Visund Field) and figure 11 (Snorre Field). The geological events are summarized in their figure 16. As illustrated on a stratigraphic scheme (their figs 2 and 15), Loseth et al . interpret the Oligocene sands as being injected from a Paleocene parent sand. They propose that the mounds at the top of the Hordaland Group resulted from forced folding over the sand injectites, as exemplified in their figure 11. Furthermore, Loseth et al . interpret escarpments on the Top Hordaland Group Unconformity as cliff sections similar to those of southeastern England today and claim that the northern North Sea was subaerially exposed during a 10 myr Miocene time span. Loseth et al . (2012, 2013) not only challenge our previous turbiditic interpretation of the Pleistocene sand (Eidvin & …

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