Abstract

Abstract The Møre and Vøring basins at the mid-Norwegian margin were affected by a series of rift phases separated by periods of tectonic quiescence from Caledonian collapse in the Devonian to final continental break-up in the earliest Eocene. The tectonic phases were mostly extensional in nature, and the pre-drift extension across the Møre and Vøring basins since mid-Permian time has been estimated to be of the order of 200–250 km. The pre-Cretaceous basin configuration is poorly constrained due to limited seismic resolution at great depths and a lack of borehole control. A fundamental change occurred in the crustal deformation regime: from Late Jurassic distributed stretching of the upper crust to Early Cretaceous thinning at lower-crustal levels located along the axis of the Møre and Vøring basins. A westward migration of Late Cretaceous–Paleocene depocentres in the Vøring Basin reflects the focus of deformation towards the time and line of break-up. The basin architecture and evolution are summarized in relation to tectono-sedimentary elements corresponding to the main tectonic and depositional phases, and represent characteristic megasequences in the seismic data. Finally, the exploration history and main petroleum systems of the Møre and Vøring basins are presented.

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