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A review on the structural styles of deformation during Late Cretaceous and Paleocene tectonic phases in the southern North Sea area
Deckers, J.; van der Voet, E. (2018). A review on the structural styles of deformation during Late Cretaceous and Paleocene tectonic phases in the southern North Sea area. J. Geodyn. 115: 1-9. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jog.2018.01.005
In: Journal of Geodynamics. Elsevier Science: Amsterdam. ISSN 0264-3707; e-ISSN 1879-1670, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Author keywords
    Basin inversion; Sub-Hercynian phase; Laramide phase; North Sea Basin

Authors  Top 
  • Deckers, J., more
  • van der Voet, E., more

Abstract
    The Mesozoic rifts in the southern North Sea area were affected by Late Cretaceous to Paleocene inversion. Two main inversion phases were traditionally identified in this interval: the Sub-Hercynian and the Laramide phases. The Sub-Hercynian phase started in the early Late Cretaceous, peaked during the Campanian and ended in the late Maastrichtian, while the Laramide phase started in the late Danian and ended in the Thanetian. The Late Cretaceous Sub-Hercynian phase was strong and occurred in several pulses. These pulses led to basin-scale uplift by large reverse movements along basin-bounding faults and resulted in large amounts of erosion (up to 2 km) of Mesozoic and older sediments. The middle Paleocene Laramide phase on the other hand resulted in mild, domal uplift of some Late Cretaceous inverted basins and subsidence (into depocenters) of others. The subsequent Cenozoic inversion phases displayed similar or lower amplitudes and wavelengths of vertical surface movements as the Laramide phase. The transition from the Sub-Hercynian to the Laramide phase in the southern North Sea area therefore coincides with the overall transition from fault-controlled inversion to broad domal vertical surface movements.

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