Abstract

Abstract Intrusive and extrusive mafic igneous rocks in the Embla oil field, central North Sea, testify to repeated post-Caledonian magmatism on the northern flank of the Mid North Sea High. The igneous rocks are highly clay- and carbonate-altered, but retain their High Field Strength element signatures on the sample scale. These signatures are used to group, classify and investigate the tectonic significance of the rocks. Three magmatic events are identified. Late Devonian transitional basalts are interpreted as part of a bimodal volcanic assemblage that includes ca. 375 Ma alkali rhyolites, suggested to record rifting in a proto-Central Graben. Early Permian volcanic and hypabyssal alkaline rocks in the Embla oil field display lamprophyric traits and represent low degree melts. They likely correlate either to ca. 300 Ma lamprophyre magmatism leading up to, or 298-292 Ma alkaline magmatism in the Midland Valley - Southern Uplands coeval with the northwest European magmatic flare-up at the Permo-Carboniferous boundary. Kimmeridgian-Tithonian submarine tholeiitic basalts in the Embla oil field post-date the alkaline continental mid Jurassic magmatism associated with doming and initial rifting in the North Sea, and are suggested to represent a hitherto unknown volcanic expression of the late Jurassic main rift phase in the Central Graben.

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