Abstract

Our knowledge of crystalline basement rocks flooring continental rift basins, rifted margin deposits, and foreland basins is poor, yet important for understanding basin evolution, crustal heat production, petroleum maturation, and for offshore mineral exploration. Using the northern North Sea rift as an example, we demonstrate how modern broadband seismic data can be utilized to unravel basement lithology and structure at a previously unprecedented level of detail. In our case study, we have discovered a pre-rift Caledonian basement with a folded structural pattern very similar to Devonian collapse-related structures onshore Western Norway. The data indicate that the collapse-generated Caledonian infrastructure extends >100 km into the northern North Sea, defining a wide zone of Caledonian crust that turned hot and mobilized vertically by upright folding and detachment faulting during the post-collisional stage. This extensive post-orogenic thermally induced collapse makes the south Scandinavian Caledonides unique among Phanerozoic orogens.

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