Skip to main content
CASP Visit CASP website

Main

  • About Us
    • How We Can Help
    • A Bit of History
    • Our Status
    • People
    • Jobs
    • SEM Facility
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • Preventing Harm in Research and Innovation
  • Products
    • Geological Carbon Storage Research
    • Regional Research
    • Reports
    • Data Packages
    • Geological Collections and Data
  • Charity and Education
    • Publications
    • Meetings
    • The Robert Scott Research Fund
    • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • Outreach
  • Interactive Map
    • Arctic Region
    • China Region
    • East Africa Region
    • North Africa and Middle East Region
    • North Atlantic Region
    • Russia Region
    • South Atlantic Region
    • Southeast Europe to West Central Asia Region
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Structural evolution and basin architecture of the Traill Ø region, NE Greenland: A record of polyphase rifting of the East Greenland continental margin

Structural evolution and basin architecture of the Traill Ø region, NE Greenland: A record of polyphase rifting of the East Greenland continental margin

Fault block basins exposed along NE Greenland provide insights into the tectonic evolution of East Greenland and the Norwegian-Greenland Sea. We present a new geological map and cross sections of the Traill Ø region, NE Greenland, which formed the western margin of the Vøring Basin prior to Cenozoic seafloor spreading. Observations support a polyphase rift evolution with three rift phases during Devonian–Triassic, Jurassic–Cretaceous, and Cenozoic time. The greatest amounts of faulting and block rotation occurred during Cenozoic rifting, which we correlate with development of the continent-ocean transition after ca. 56 Ma and the Jan Mayen microcontinent after ca. 36 Ma. A newly devised macrofaunal-based stratigraphic framework for the Cretaceous sandy mudstone succession provides insights into Jurassic–Cretaceous rifting. We identify a reduction in sedimentation rates during the Late Cretaceous; this corresponds to a transition from structurally confined to unconfined sedimentation that coincides with increased clastic sedimentation to the Vøring and Møre Basins derived from East Greenland. With each rift phase we record an increase in the number of active faults and a decrease in the spacing between them. We attribute this to fault block rotation that leads to an excess build-up of stress that can only be released by the creation of new steep faults. In addition, we observe a stepwise migration of deformation toward the rift axis that we attribute to preexisting lithospheric heterogeneity that was modified during subsequent rift and post-rift phases. Such observations are not readily conformable to classic rift evolution models and highlight the importance of post-rift lithospheric processes that occur during polyphase rift evolution.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    Structural evolution and basin architecture of the Traill Ø region, NE Greenland: A record of polyphase rifting of the East Greenland continental margin
  • Year

    2017
  • Author(s)

    Parsons, A.J., Whitham, A.G., Kelly, S.R.A., Vautravers, B.P.H., Dalton, T.J.S., Andrews, S.D., Pickles, C.S., Strogen, D.P., Braham, W., Jolley, D.W. and Gregory, F.J.
  • Journal

    Geosphere
  • Volume

    13
  • Issue

    3
  • Page(s)

    733-770
  • URL

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/GES01382.1
  • People

    • Simon Kelly
    • Benoit Vautravers
    • Andrew Whitham

Charity and Education

  • Publications
  • Meetings
  • The Robert Scott Research Fund
  • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • 2025 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2024 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2023 Fieldwork Award Winner
    • 2022 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2021 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2020 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2019 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2018 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2017 Fieldwork Award Winners
  • Outreach
  • © CASP A Not-For-Profit Organisation
  • Charity No. 298729
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn