Abstract

AbstractDuring the Devonian, the Svalbard Archipelago lay at low latitudes, occupying a paleogeographic position at the intersection of Caledonian and Ellesmerian orogens. Provenance analysis, including detrital zircon U‐Pb age studies, of Devonian (ca. 420–360 Ma) strata from the Andrée Land Basin, Svalbard, help reconstruct sediment sources to understand the assembly of the three basement provinces that make up Svalbard, which are presently separated by Devonian sedimentary basins and(or) faults with syn‐to post‐Devonian displacement. The studied Andrée Land Group strata, which are part of the North Atlantic's Old Red Sandstone, consist of the Early Devonian Wood Bay Formation and Middle to Late Devonian Mimerdalen subgroup. Paleocurrent indicators from Lower to lower‐Middle Devonian strata record north‐directed sediment transport. Detrital zircon U‐Pb ages indicate a prominent “Caledonian” signal and include sources from Svalbard's Northwestern and(or) Southwestern basement provinces. In Middle and Upper Devonian strata, paleocurrents and detrital zircon ages record a shift to a predominantly eastern‐northeastern provenance, likely from the uplifting Ny‐Friesland block along the Billefjorden Fault Zone. Late Ediacaran‐early Cambrian detrital zircons in the uppermost Planteryggen Formation (Frasnian) indicate extrabasinal sources possibly associated with the Timanian orogen of Northern Baltica. The combined provenance data suggest Svalbard may have already been assembled, similar to the modern block, with the Andrée Land Basin located between modern exposures of the Southwestern/Northwestern and the Northeastern basement provinces. Comparison of detrital zircon ages from Andrée Land Group strata with those from other circum Arctic Devonian strata provides constraints on Svalbard's paleogeographic position in the Devonian.

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