Abstract
The geology of North-East Greenland (70–78°N) exposes unique evidence of the basin development between the Devonian collapse of the Caledonian Orogen and the extrusion of volcanics at the Paleocene–Eocene transition during break-up of the North-East Atlantic. Here we pay special attention to unconformities in the stratigraphic record – do they represent periods of stability and non-deposition or periods of subsidence and accumulation of rocks followed by episodes of uplift and erosion? To answer that and other questions, we used apatite fission-track analysis and vitrinite reflectance data together with stratigraphic landscape analysis and observations from the stratigraphic record to study the thermo-tectonic history of North-East Greenland. Our analysis reveals eight regional stages of post-Caledonian development: (1) Late Carboniferous uplift and erosion led to formation of a sub-Permian peneplain covered by coarse siliciclastic deposits. (2) Middle Triassic exhumation led to removal of a thick cover including a considerable thickness of upper Carboniferous – Middle Triassic rocks and produced thick siliciclastic deposits in the rift system. (3) Denudation at the transition between the Early and Middle Jurassic affected most of the study area outside the Jameson Land Basin and produced a weathered surface above which Middle–Upper Jurassic sediments accumulated. (4) Earliest Cretaceous uplift and erosion along the rifted margin and further inland accompanied the Mesozoic rift climax and produced coarse-grained sedimentary infill of the rift basins. (5) Mid-Cretaceous uplift and erosion initiated removal of Cretaceous post-rift sediments that had accumulated above the Mesozoic rifts and their hinterland, leading to cooling of Mesozoic sediments from maximum palaeotemperatures. (6) End-Eocene uplift was accompanied by faulting and intrusion of magmatic bodies and resulted in extensive mass wasting on the East Greenland shelf. This event initiated the removal of a thick post-rift succession that had accumulated after break-up and produced a peneplain near sea level, the Upper Planation Surface. (7) Late Miocene uplift and erosion, evidenced by massive progradation on the shelf, resulted in the formation of the Lower Planation Surface by incision below the uplifted Upper Planation Surface. (8) Early Pliocene uplift raised the Upper and the Lower Planation Surfaces to their present elevations of about 2 and 1 km above sea level, respectively, and initiated the formation of the present-day landscape through fluvial and glacial erosion. Additional cooling episodes of more local extent, related to igneous activity in the early Eocene and in the early Miocene, primarily affected parts of northern Jameson Land. The three earliest episodes had a profound impact beyond Greenland and accompanied the fragmentation of Pangaea. Younger episodes were controlled by plate-tectonic processes, possibly including dynamic support from the Iceland Plume. Our results emphasise that gaps in the stratigraphic record often reflect episodes of kilometre-scale vertical movements that may result from both lithospheric and sub-lithospheric processes.
Highlights
The step between the Upper planation surface (UPS) and the Lower planation surface (LPS) follow the incision along the major valleys, whereas the pronounced topographical step across Post-Devonian Main Fault (PDMF) is caused by the differences in lithology
Apatite separates of 20 Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sedimentary rocks from the Jameson Land region were kindly made available by Kirsten Hansen
We suggest that the mass wasting is due to the uplift of the margin of North-East Greenland during the end-Eocene C6 episode, and that the horizon defining the erosional incision can be dated to about 35 Ma
Summary
A series of Carboniferous–Mesozoic sedimentary basins developed in East Greenland following initial, post-Caledonian Devonian deposition (Fig. 3). Subsidence was accommodated mainly along basin margin faults, and there was no syn-sedimentary faulting of the platform This is in contrast to the region north of Jameson Land, notably the Wollaston Forland – Kuhn Ø area, which was fragmented into narrow tilted blocks during Middle Jurassic – earliest Cretaceous rifting. A major hiatus spanning the latest Carboniferous to early Permian separates tilted strata of the Traill Ø Group from the overlying upper Permian conglomerates of the Huledal Formation (Surlyk 1990; Vigran et al 1999; Stemmerik 2000) This unconformity marks the most profound change in tectonic style and overall depositional environment in the post-Caledonian development of East Greenland (Surlyk 1990). Campanian–Maastrichtian strata are present in the Kangerlussuaq area to the south (Soper & Costa 1976; Larsen et al 2001)
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