Evolution of shelf-margin clinoforms and deep-water fans during the middle Eocene in the SØrvestsnaget Basin, southwest Barents Sea

AAPG Bulletin ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 515-544 ◽  
Author(s):  
Polina A. Safronova ◽  
Sverre Henriksen ◽  
Karin Andreassen ◽  
Jan Sverre Laberg ◽  
Tore O. Vorren
2012 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Polina Alekseevna Safronova ◽  
Karin Andreassen ◽  
Jan Sverre Laberg ◽  
Tore Ola Vorren

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jan Robert Baur

<p>This study investigates the nature, origin, and distribution of Cretaceous to Recent sediment fill in the offshore Taranaki Basin, western New Zealand. Seismic attributes and horizon interpretations on 30,000 km of 2D seismic reflection profiles and three 3D seismic surveys (3,000 km²) are used to image depositional systems and reconstruct paleogeography in detail and regionally, across a total area of ~100,000 km² from the basin's present-day inner shelf to deep water. These data are used to infer the influence of crustal tectonics and mantle dynamics on the development of depocentres and depositional pathways. During the Cretaceous to Eocene period the basin evolved from two separate rifts into a single broad passive margin. Extensional faulting ceased before 85 Ma in the present-day deep-water area of the southern New Caledonia Trough, but stretching of the lithosphere was higher (β=1.5-2) than in the proximal basin (β<1.5), where faulting continued into the Paleocene (~60 Ma). The resulting differential thermal subsidence caused northward tilting of the basin and influenced the distribution of sedimentary facies in the proximal basin. Attribute maps delineate the distribution of the basin's main petroleum source and reservoir facies, from a ~20,000 km²-wide, Late Cretaceous coastal plain across the present-day deep-water area, to transgressive shoreline belts and coastal plains in the proximal basin. Rapid subsidence began in the Oligocene and the development of a foredeep wedge through flexural loading of the eastern boundary of Taranaki Basin is tracked through the Middle Miocene. Total shortening within the basin was minor (5-8%) and slip was mostly accommodated on the basin-bounding Taranaki Fault Zone, which detached the basin from much greater Miocene plate boundary deformation further east. The imaging of turbidite facies and channels associated with the rapidly outbuilding shelf margin wedge illustrates the development of large axial drainage systems that transported sediment over hundreds of kilometres from the shelf to the deep-water basin since the Middle Miocene. Since the latest Miocene, south-eastern Taranaki Basin evolved from a compressional foreland to an extensional (proto-back-arc) basin. This structural evolution is characterised by: 1) cessation of intra-basinal thrusting by 7-5 Ma, 2) up to 700 m of rapid (>1000 m/my) tectonic subsidence in 100-200 km-wide, sub-circular depocentres between 6-4 Ma (without significant upper-crustal faulting), and 3) extensional faulting since 3.5-3 Ma. The rapid subsidence in the east caused the drastic modification of shelf margin geometry and sediment dispersal directions. Time and space scales of this subsidence point to lithospheric or asthenospheric mantle modification, which may be a characteristic process during back-arc basin development. Unusual downward vertical crustal movements of >1 km, as inferred from seismic facies, paleobathymetry and tectonic subsidence analysis, have created the present-day Deepwater Taranaki Basin physiography, but are not adequately explained by simple rift models. It is proposed that the distal basin, and perhaps even the more proximal Taranaki Paleogene passive margin, were substantially modified by mantle processes related to the initiation of subduction on the fledgling Australia-Pacific plate boundary north of New Zealand in the Eocene.</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (4) ◽  
pp. 589-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steffen Kiel ◽  
Kazutaka Amano

Bathymodiolin mussels are a group of bivalves associated with deep-sea hydrothermal vents and other reducing deep-sea habitats, and they have a particularly rich early Cenozoic fossil record in western Washington State, U.S.A. Here we recognize six species from middle Eocene to latest Oligocene deep-water methane seep deposits in western Washington. Two of them are new: Vulcanidas? goederti from the middle Eocene Humptulips Formation and Bathymodiolus (sensu lato) satsopensis from the late Oligocene part of the Lincoln Creek Formation. Very similar to the latter but more elongate are specimens from the early Oligocene Jansen Creek Member of the Makah Formation and are identified as B. (s.l.) aff. satsopensis. Bathymodiolus (s.l.) inouei Amano and Jenkins, 2011 is reported from the Lincoln Creek Formation. Idas? olympicus Kiel and Goedert, 2007 was previously known from late Eocene to Oligocene whale and wood falls in western Washington and is here reported from Oligocene seep deposits of the Makah and Pysht Formations. Vulcanidas? goederti occurs at a seep deposit from a paleodepth possibly as great as 2000 m, suggesting that its living relative, Vulcanidas insolatus Cosel and Marshall, 2010, which lives at depths of only 150–500 m, is derived from a deep-water ancestor. The bathymodiolins in western Washington indicate that the group originated at least in the middle Eocene and underwent a first diversification in the late Eocene to Oligocene. Early ontogenetic shells of all fossil species investigated so far, including the middle Eocene Vulcanidas? goederti, reflect planktotrophic larval development indicating that this developmental mode is an ancestral trait of bathymodiolins.


Author(s):  
U. Z. Naumenko ◽  
V. M. Matsui

Finding out the conditions of the geological past under which tar secretions were fossilised and primary bio-sedimentary deposits of protoamber were accumulated and amber-succinite placers formed in the marine environment is an important link in scientific research. Insufficient study of amber-succinite as an organic formation, which has gone through a difficult path of transition from wildlife to minerals, leads to irrational use and search for such valuable raw materials and its extraction is much less beneficial than planned. The authors have carried out a comprehensive systematization of accumulated knowledge on amber-succinite and other mineral types of mineral resins in Ukraine and the entire Baltic-Dnipro amber province. The article discusses the creation of a new map of mineral fossil resins in Ukraine. In addition to the known amber-bearing zones, deposits and occurrences of amber, the map carriespaleogeological and predicted loads, is closely related to the formation of both secondary placers of amber-succinite and primary biogenic-sedimentary deposits – resin bodies, transitional composition in the first half of the Middle Eocene (Buchakian time). In order to develop a reasonable forecast of the deposits, the authors identified the root source of amber-succinite placers, which is represented by biogenic-sedimentary deposits of resin bodies.  These deposits were formed in the Lower Middle Eocene during the Buchakian time on land of the Ukrainian Shield, most often within swampy accumulative depressions associated with ancient faults and structural tectonic traps. The conditions of the geological past, under which tar secretions were fossilized and primary biogenic-sedimentary deposits of the protoamber were accumulated, as well as the formation of amber-succinite placers, the first intermediate collectors in the coastal-marine, liman delta and deep-water parts of the paleoshelf, have been clarified. The work carried out by the authors resulted in predicted conclusions about the possibility of finding new areas promising for the discovery of industrial deposits of the most valuable type of fossil resins – amber succinite.


Author(s):  
Nadine Jacques ◽  
Hermann Pettersen ◽  
Kristine Cerbule ◽  
Bent Herrmann ◽  
Ólafur A. Ingólfsson ◽  
...  

In most trawl fisheries, drag forces tend to close the meshes in large areas of diamond mesh codends, negatively affecting their selective potential. In the Barents Sea deep-water shrimp (Pandalus borealis) trawl fishery, selectivity is based on a sorting grid followed by a diamond mesh codend. However, the retention of juvenile fish as well as undersized shrimp is still a problem. In this study, we estimated the effect of applying different codend modifications, each aimed at affecting codend mesh openness and thereby selectivity. Changing from a 4-panel to a 2-panel construction of the codend did not affect size selectivity. Shortening the lastridge ropes of a 4-panel codend by 20% resulted in minor reductions for juvenile fish bycatch, but a 45% reduction of undersized shrimp was observed. Target-size catches of shrimp were nearly unaffected. When the codend mesh circumference was reduced while simultaneously shortening the lastridge ropes, the effect on catch efficiency for shrimp or juvenile fish bycatch was marginal compared to a 4-panel codend design with shortened lastridge ropes.


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