Abstract

Age assessments from both palynostratigraphy and macrofossil biostratigraphy of the sandstone-dominated Mågensfjeld Formation, Wandel Sea Basin, North Greenland were hitherto hampered by post-burial thermal degradation of dinoflagellate cysts and a lack of well-preserved macrofossils. The formation was previously assigned to the Upper Cretaceous based on erroneous fossil identifications. Finds of cardioceratid and kosmoceratid ammonites during recent field work now provide the first age control of the unit, demonstrating it to be of late Bajocian – late Bathonian and perhaps Callovian (Middle Jurassic) age. This makes it among the oldest Jurassic units, perhaps even Mesozoic units, recorded in Kilen, North Greenland and eastern North Greenland. Previously, the complex structural and tectonic evolution of the area was poorly understood, and the structural relation of the Mågensfjeld Formation to the surrounding Mesozoic units was a puzzle. The new age assessment simplifies the structural situation in the area significantly. Further, the inference of a large reverse fault previously required to explain the proximity of the Mågensfjeld Formation to neighbouring Jurassic units is now unnecessary. The data show that the Wandel Sea Basin was influenced by the Middle Jurassic transgression and had sufficient accommodation space for marine deposition earlier than previously thought. The unit serves as a key datapoint and analogue for possible Middle Jurassic units in adjacent offshore basins.

Highlights

  • The first ever fossils reported from Kilen in eastern North Greenland (Fig. 1) were collected by the Greenarctic Consortium and included the ammonite Cranocephalites vulgaris, Spath and various bivalves (Dawes 1976; Dawes & Peel 1981)

  • We report new finds of fossils from Mågensfjeld in Kilen, collected in 2013, which demonstrate a Middle Jurassic age of the Mågensfjeld Formation

  • The sandstone succession exposed in the steep cliffs of Mågensfjeld, belonging to the Mågensfjeld Formation, records generally shallow marine depositional environments

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Summary

Introduction

The first ever fossils reported from Kilen in eastern North Greenland (Fig. 1) were collected by the Greenarctic Consortium and included the ammonite Cranocephalites vulgaris, Spath and various bivalves (Dawes 1976; Dawes & Peel 1981). The fossils indicated the presence of a Middle Jurassic succession, but their exact location was not known. At this time, the geology of Kilen had been interpreted solely from aerial photos as Proterozoic–Palaeozoic strata deformed during the Caledonian orogeny (Haller 1970). The discovery of Mesozoic fossils prompted the need for further field observations in this remote and inaccessible area. Håkansson and co-workers collected lithological, Keywords: ammonite stratigraphy, Middle Jurassic, North Greenland, sandstone deposition, Wandel Sea Basin

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