Abstract

The Middle Jurassic Bryne and Lulu Formations of the Søgne Basin (northern part of the Danish Central Graben) consist of fluvially-dominated coastal plain deposits, overlain by interfingering shoreface and back-barrier deposits. Laterally continuous, mainly fining-upwards fluvial channel sandstones that locally show evidence for tidal influence dominate the alluvial/coastal plain deposits of the lower Bryne Formation. The sandstones are separated by units of fine-grained floodplain sediments that show a fining-upwards – coarsening-upwards pattern and locally grade into lacustrine mudstones. A regional unconformity that separates the lower Bryne Formation from the mainly estuarine upper Bryne Formation is defined by the strongly erosional base of a succession of stacked channel sandstones, interpreted as the fill of a system of incised valleys. Most of the stacked channel sandstones show abundant mud laminae and flasers, and rare herringbone structures, suggesting that they were deposited in a tidal environment, probably an estuary. Several tens of metres of the lower Bryne Formation may have been removed by erosion at this unconformity. The estuarine channel sandstone succession is capped by coal beds that attain a thickness of several metres in the western part of the Søgne Basin, but are thin and poorly developed in the central part of the basin. Above the coal beds, the Lulu Formation is dominated by various types of tidally influenced paralic deposits in the western part of the basin and by coarsening-upwards shoreface and beach deposits in central parts. Westwards-thickening wedges of paralic deposits interfinger with eastwards-thickening wedges of shallow marine deposits. The Middle Jurassic succession is subdivided into nine sequences. In the lower Bryne Formation, sequence boundaries are situated at the base of laterally continuous fluvial channel sandstones whereas maximum flooding surfaces are placed in laterally extensive floodplain or lacustrine mudstones. The unconformity that separates the alluvial plain deposits of the lower Bryne Formation from the estuary deposits of the upper Bryne Formation is interpreted as a sequence boundary that bounds a system of incised valleys in the western and southern parts of the basin. Sequence boundaries in the Lulu Formation are situated at the top of progradational shoreface units or at the base of estuarine channels. Maximum flooding surfaces are located within marine or lagoonal mudstone units. Marine highstand deposits are partitioned seawards, in the eastern part of the basin, whereas paralic transgressive deposits are partitioned landwards, in the west. This marked sediment partitioning in the uppermost part of the succession resulted from the alternation of episodes of fault-induced half-graben subsidence with periods of slow uniform subsidence.

Highlights

  • The Middle Jurassic Bryne and Lulu Formations of the Søgne Basin consist of fluvially-dominated coastal plain deposits, overlain by interfingering shoreface and back-barrier deposits

  • Whereas the Middle Jurassic sequences outlined by Andsbjerg & Dybkjær (2003, this volume) represent time-spans of 5–10 Ma. which is consistent with the influence of intraplate stress (Cloetingh 1988; Hallam 1988; Miall 1997), the present study identifies sequences with durations in the range 1–5 Ma., which may indicate a stronger influence of local tectonics

  • The Middle Jurassic deposits of the Danish Central Graben form part of a major system of alluvial plain, coastal plain, delta plain and shallow marine deposits that extends over large tracts of the North Sea area

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Summary

16 Fining-upwards heterolithic sandstone and mudstone

Sharp-based sandstone beds with HCS and subordinate wave ripple lamination. Fine-grained sandstone, SCS, low-angle planar cross-bedding and scour structures. Fine- to coarse-grained sandstone, occasionally pebbly.Trough cross-bedding, planar cross-bedding and subordinate current and wave ripples. Based fining-upwards units of very fine- to medium-grained sandstone. Parallel or gently inclined lamination, current ripples, local soft-sediment deformation structures or high-angle cross-bedding. Planar and trough crossbedding with ripple cross-laminated flaser and wavy bedding in upper parts of units. Bioturbated with mud laminae and flasers, ripple cross-lamination. Bioturbation in the most fine-grained intervals: Diplocraterion isp. Moderate to intense bioturbation: common Diplocraterion isp., Planolites isp. Coarsening-upwards very fine- to medium-grained sandstone units. Parallel lamination, current and wave ripple cross-lamination and small-scale HCS/SCS.

21 Fining-upwards interbedded sandstone and mudstone
27 Coarsening-upwards units of deformed siltstone and sandstone
30 Organic-rich laminated mudstone
90 This page and facing page
Discussion
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