scholarly journals Field work in the north of the Ivisârtoq region, inner Godthåbsfjord, southern West Greenland

1983 ◽  
Vol 115 ◽  
pp. 49-56
Author(s):  
B Chadwick ◽  
M.A Crewe ◽  
J.F.W Park

The programme of field investigations in the north of the Ivisartoq region begun in 1981 by Chadwick & Crewe (1982) was continued in 1982. Julia Park began mapping the Taserssuaq granodiorite, its host rocks and the Ataneq fault in the north-west. Dur team was joined by D. Bellur, Geological Survey of India, nominally as an assistant. In this report we present only summary notes of new findings relevant to the interpretation of the geometry and chronology of this segment of the Archaean crust in southern West Greenland. We use the established terminology for the Archaean rocks of the Godthåbsfjord region.

Author(s):  
Bjørn Thomassen ◽  
Johannes Kyed ◽  
Agnete Steenfelt ◽  
Tapani Tukiainen

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Thomassen, B., Kyed, J., Steenfelt, A., & Tukiainen, T. (1999). Upernavik 98: reconnaissance mineral exploration in North-West Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 183, 39-45. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v183.5203 _______________ The Upernavik 98 project is a one-year project aimed at the acquisition of information on mineral occurrences and potential in North-West Greenland between Upernavik and Kap Seddon, i.e. from 72°30′ to 75°30′N (Fig. 1A). A similar project, Karrat 97, was carried out in 1997 in the Uummannaq region 70°30′–72°30′N (Steenfelt et al. 1998a). Both are joint projects between the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) and the Bureau of Minerals and Petroleum (BMP), Government of Greenland, and wholly funded by the latter. The main purpose of the projects is to attract the interest of the mining industry. The field work comprised systematic drainage sampling, reconnaissance mineral exploration and spectroradiometric measurements of rock surfaces.


1979 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 14-22
Author(s):  
P.R Dawes

The field mapping of the Precambrian crystalline basement and overlying Thule Group of the Thule district aimed at the production of a 1:500000 map sheet between 75°15'N and 78°N was continued in July and August (fig. 5). The field work was split up, due to the varying availability of transport facilities, into three phases. (1) The charter of a Bell 204 helicopter from Thule Air Base enabled mapping in western Inglefield Land, and in the nunatak terrain of Prudhoe Land and Melville Bugt. (2) Investigation of the outer coast of western Melville Bugt was carried out with the aid of GGU cutter K. J. V. Steenstrup. (3) Detailed stratigraphical work in the middle and upper part of the Thule Group was based on foot traverses from Thule Air Base.


1976 ◽  
Vol 80 ◽  
pp. 23-28
Author(s):  
P.R Dawes

Field investigations aimed at the produetion of a 1:500 000 map sheet of the Thule distriet were continued during August and early September. The unusuaIly poor weather conditions and the premature arrival of the winter's snowfall, reduced the season to some 20 effective working days. The field work was in two parts. At the beginning of the season a Jet Ranger helicopterwas chartered at Thule Air Base and four days were spent investigating nunatak and inland areas north of Savigsivik and Kap York and at the heads of Wolstenholme Fjord, Olrik Fjord and Inglefield Bredning. The second part was an investigation ofthe Proterozoic Thule Groupon Herbert ø, Northumberland Ø and Hakluyt Ø. Transport for this phase wasa locally hired boat from Avatak Henson of Moriussaq. Certain logistic support was supplied to H. R. Cooke who visited the Thule district at the end of the field season to assess the economic potential of various minerallocalities. Kurt Thomsen ably assisted both in Cooke's and the author's field programmes.


1994 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 47-51
Author(s):  
N Henriksen

The Geological Survey of Greenland (GGU) initiated in 1964 a 1:500000 mapping programme to produce a general overview of the onshore geology of all the ice-free areas of Greenland. So far 10 of a total of 14 planned map sheets have been published, and one additional sheet for which field work has been completed is under compilation. Most of Greenland is therefore now covered by map sheets of this series and only three areas remain to be covered: in North-West Greenland (sheet 6), in eastern North Greenland (sheet 9) and in East Greenland (sheet 11). Eastern North Greenland (map sheet no. 9; Fig. 1) is the target of the present project, with planned field work from 1993–1995. The first season (1993) was used for logistical preparation and geological reconnaissance in advance of the more intensive field work in the two following seasons (1994–95).


1992 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 36-41
Author(s):  
F Kalsbeek ◽  
F.G Christiansen

One of GGU's major field activities in 1991 took place in July and August in the Disko Bugt region of central West Greenland. This was the third year of field investigations under the 'Disko Bugt Project', planned for 1999–1992, with one summer's break in 1990. The project spreads over various activities and over two very different geological provinces: the Archaean-Proterozoic basement east and north-east of Disko Bugt, and the onshore part of the Cretaceous-Tertiary basin in the west, on Disko and the western part of Nugssuaq (Fig. 1). In 1989, the second year of the project, work was concentrated in the eastern basement part of the study area, and in 1991 this work was brought to conclusion. In 1992 field work (including a shallow core drilling campaign) will be concentrated in the sediments and volcanics on Nugssuaq and Svartenhuk Halvø to the north. The main aim of the Disko Bugt Project is to provide a background for the evaluation of the economic potential of the regional mineral resources, mainly in the Precambrian basement, and the hydrocarbon potential of the neighbouring basin offshore (see Kalsbeek, 1989. 1990).


Author(s):  
Niels Henriksen

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Henriksen, N. (1998). North-East Greenland 1997–1998: a new 1:500 000 mapping project in the Caledonian fold belt (72°–75°N). Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 180, 119-127. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v180.5095 _______________ The Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) continued in 1997 the systematic geological mapping programme for the 1:500 000 regional map series, with initiation of field work on sheet no. 11, which covers part of North-East Greenland. Of the 14 planned map sheets at 1:500 000 which will cover all of Greenland, 11 have been published, and one additional sheet for which field work has been completed is under compilation. Only two areas of Greenland are not yet covered by map sheets of this series: part of North-West Greenland (sheet no 6) and the target for the present project in North-East Greenland (sheet no. 11). The field work for the latter sheet is planned for two seasons, with the first season completed in 1997 and the second and final season to follow in 1998. The map sheet (no. 11) covers the region between Kong Oscar Fjord and the Stauning Alper in the south (72°N) and Kuhn Ø and Grandjean Fjord in the north (75°N, Fig. 1). The western part of this region is dominated by crystalline complexes of the East Greenland Caledonian fold belt. A post-Caledonian sequence of Upper Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sediments and Tertiary plateau basalts and intrusions covers the eastern part of the region. This article focuses on the Caledonian geology, whereas results from the work in the post-Caledonian sediments are described in the article by Stemmerik et al. (1998, this volume). The new Survey work for map sheet 11 represents a reinvestigation of areas extensively studied by geologists of Lauge Koch’s expeditions to East Greenland (1926–58), the principal results of which were compiled by John Haller for the 1:250 000 map sheets covering the region 72°–76°N (Koch & Haller 1971) and incorporated into an impressive regional description of the East Greenland Caledonides (Haller 1971). The Scoresby Sund region to the south of latitude 72°N and the Dove Bugt region to the north of latitude 75°N have already been investigated by the Geological Survey of Greenland (Henriksen 1986, 1997; Higgins 1994) as part of the present ongoing 1:500 000 regional mapping programme. The 1997–1998 mapping project will fill the last remaining gap in the Survey’s 1:500 000 coverage of North-East Greenland. All of North-East Greenland is covered by a set of wide angle black and white vertical aerial photographs taken in the period 1978–87 from an altitude of c. 14 km. On the basis of these aerial photographs and ground control points established by Kort- og Matrikelstyrelsen (National Survey and Cadastre – formerly the Geodetic Institute), new topographical maps of the entire region 72°–75°N, at a scale of 1:100 000, with 100 m contours, are being drawn at the Survey and will serve as a basis for the field investigations and the subsequent geological map compilations. Drawing of the topographic maps in the Survey´s photogrammetric laboratory is combined with photogeological interpretation both prior to and following the field investigations. In addition to establishing a general overview of the regional geology, the project includes activities aimed at supplementing knowledge of the economic potential of the region, in respect to both minerals (Harpøth et al. 1986) and hydrocarbons (Christiansen et al. 1992; Stemmerik et al. 1997). The field work co-ordinated by the Survey included co-operation with a geophysicist from the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research (AWI), Bremerhaven, who undertook rock magnetic investigations to facilitate interpretation of an AWI aeromagnetic survey, and four Norwegian sedimentologists from Saga Petroleum whose work was integrated with a Survey group working with Mesozoic sediments (Stemmerik et al. 1998, this volume). Logistic support was also given to three groups of geologists from the University of Oslo and three geologists from Massachussetts Institute of Technology, with whom agreements on scientific co-operation had been arranged in advance. Some aspects of the project are based on funding from the Danish National Science Foundation and Carlsberg Foundation, with support for special research topics concerning the pre-Caledonian basement terrain, Caledonian metamorphism, and studies of Upper Proterozoic carbonate sediments. The field investigations in 1997 were carried out during a seven week field season between early July and late August with participation of a total of 38 persons, including 32 geologists (Henriksen 1998). The work was supported by two helicopters and a small, fixed wing, Twin Otter aircraft, which operated from Mestersvig, a former airport which is kept open for limited special operations by the military sledge patrol Sirius. The GEUS group benefitted substantially from base facilities at Mestersvig, organised and manned by the Danish Polar Center (DPC). Transport between Mestersvig and Denmark was carried out by the Royal Danish Air Force (RDAF) using a C-130 Hercules aircraft.


1950 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 1-142
Author(s):  
D Laursen

The present report deals with the Quaternary marine deposits in West Greenland. The area in question extends from Kugssineq, Svartenhuk peninsula, in the north to the settlement of Sukkertoppen in the south. The field investigations for the paper have been made partly in 1939, partly in 1946, last-mentioned year under the auspices of Grønlands Geologiske Undersøgelse (abb. G.G.U., i. e. Geological Survey of Greenland). All localities visited are described with added lists of the collected shells. On the basis of the investigations made it will be demonstrated that the stratigraphy of the layers at Orpigsôq drawn up by Jensen and Harder in 1910 (30) is applicable to all the area investigated. Furthermore a detailed examination is made of the petrographic structure, the content af shells, and the levels of the various horizons, a discussion of a few errors, and ultimately an attempt at a correllation of the Quaternary marine layers of Greenland with the corresponding postglacial layers of Iceland, Norway, and Denmark.


1986 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 24-31
Author(s):  
P.R Dawes ◽  
D.C Rex

This paper is the third of a series reporting on K/Ar whole rock ages of Proterozoic basaltic rocks of the Thule district, North-West Greenland. The dating programme is a co-operative venture between the Geological Survey of Greenland and The University, Leeds, V.K., and was set up in connection with a 1:500 000 mapping project of the region between 75°N and 78° 45'N (Melville Bugt - Inglefield Land, fig. 1). Field work by one of us (PRD) has shown that several episodes of unmetamorphosed Proterozoic basic igneous rocks can be distinguished stratigraphically in the region (see below). The routine K/Ar isotopic work, carried out concurrently with the field work, has aimed at dating these episodes, thereby providing minimum ages for deposition or consolidation of the host rocks. The two earlier reports (Dawes et al., 1973, 1982a) dealt with sills and dykes from the northern part of the region (Inglefield Land - Prudhoe Land); intrusions that have known or inferred stratigraphic relationships with the Proterozoic Thule Group. The present report gathers together all hitherto unpublished K/Ar dates - 18 in total on both extrusive and intrusive rocks - mainly from the central and southern parts of the region (Inglefield Bredning and Melville Bugt). Six of the samples represent cross-cutting intrusions in the Precambrian Shield that have uncertain age relationships with the overlying Thule Group.


Author(s):  
Brian Chadwick ◽  
Adam A. Garde ◽  
John Grocott ◽  
Ken J.W. McCaffrey ◽  
Mike A. Hamilton

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Chadwick, B., Garde, A. A., Grocott, J., McCaffrey, K. J., & Hamilton, M. A. (2000). Ketilidian structure and the rapakivi suite between Lindenow Fjord and Kap Farvel, South-East Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 186, 50-59. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v186.5215 _______________ The southern tip of Greenland is underlain by the Palaeoproterozoic Ketilidian orogen (e.g. Chadwick & Garde 1996; Garde et al. 1998a). Field investigations in the summer of 1999 were focused on the structure of migmatites (metatexites) and garnetiferous granites (diatexites) of the Pelite Zone in the coastal region of South-East Greenland between Lindenow Fjord and Kap Farvel (Figs 1, 2). Here, we first address the tectonic evolution in the Pelite Zone in that region and its correlation with that in the Psammite Zone further north. Then, the structure and intrusive relationships of the rapakivi suite in the Pelite Zone are discussed, including particular reference to the interpretation of the controversial outcrop on Qernertoq (Figs 2, 8). Studies of the structure of the north-eastern part of the Julianehåb batholith around Qulleq were continued briefly from 1998 but are not addressed here (Fig. 1; Garde et al. 1999). The field study was keyed to an interpretation of the Ketilidian orogen as a whole, including controls of rates of thermal and tectonic processes in convergent settings. Earlier Survey field work (project SUPRASYD, 1992–1996) had as its principal target an evaluation of the economic potential of the orogen (Nielsen et al. 1993). Ensuing plate-tectonic studies were mainly funded in 1997–1998 by Danish research foundations and in 1999 by the Natural Environment Research Council, UK. The five-week programme in 1999 was seriously disrupted by bad weather, common in this part of Greenland, and our objectives were only just achieved. Telestation Prins Christian Sund was the base for our operations (Fig. 2), which were flown with a small helicopter (Hughes MD-500).


Author(s):  
Bjørn Thomassen ◽  
Peter R. Dawes ◽  
Agnete Steenfelt ◽  
Johan Ditlev Krebs

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Thomassen, B., Dawes, P. R., Steenfelt, A., & Krebs, J. D. (2002). Qaanaaq 2001: mineral exploration reconnaissance in North-West Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 191, 133-143. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v191.5141 _______________ Project Qaanaaq 2001, involving one season’s field work, was set up to investigate the mineral occurrences and potential of North-West Greenland between Olrik Fjord and Kap Alexander (77°10´N – 78°10´N; Fig. 1). Organised by the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) and the Bureau of Minerals and Petroleum (BMP), Government of Greenland, the project is mainly funded by the latter and has the overall goal of attracting the interest of the mining industry to the region. The investigated region – herein referred to as the Qaanaaq region – comprises 4300 km2 of ice-free land centred on Qaanaaq, the administrative capital of Qaanaap (Thule) municipality. Much of the region is characterised by a 500–800 m high plateau capped by local ice caps and intersected by fjords and glaciers. High dissected terrain occurs in Northumberland Ø and in the hinterland of Prudhoe Land where nunataks are common along the margin of the Inland Ice.


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