Abstract

Three geological provinces are recognized, separated by major fault zones: the oceanic Lofoten Basin and the Vestbakken volcanic province in the west; the southwestern Barents Sea basin province; and the eastern region which has largely acted as a stable platform since Late Paleozoic times. Since Middle Jurassic times, two structural stages are recognized in the southwestern Barents Sea: Late Mesozoic rifting and basin formation; and Early Tertiary rifting and opening of the Norwegian–Greenland Sea. This evolution reflects the main plate tectonic episodes in the North Atlantic–Arctic break-up of Pangea. Middle–Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous structuration were characterized by regional extension accompanied by strike-slip adjustments along old structural lineaments, which developed as the Bjørnøya, Tromsø and Harstad basins. Late Cretaceous development was more complex, with extension west of the Senja Ridge and the Veslemøy High, and halokinesis in the Tromsø Basin. Tertiary structuration was related to the two-stage opening of the Norwegian–Greenland Sea and the formation of the predominantly sheared western Barents Sea continental margin. Tectonic activity shifted towards the west in successive phases. The southwestern Barents Sea basin province developed within the De Geer Zone in a region of rift-shear interaction. Initially, oblique extension linked the Arctic and North Atlantic rift systems (Middle Jurassic–Early Cretaceous). Later, a continental megashear developed (Late Cretaceous–Paleocene), and finally a sheared-rifted margin formed during the opening of the Norwegian–Greenland Sea (Eocene–Recent).

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