Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin

Present-day catchments adjacent to sedimentary basins may preserve geomorphic elements that have been active through long intervals of time. Relicts of ancient catchments in present-day landscapes may be investigated using mass-balance models and can give important information about upland landscape...

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Main Authors: Eide, Christian, Klausen, Tore, Katkov, Denis, Suslova, Anna, Helland-Hansen, William
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: California Digital Library (CDL) 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/edu5f
id crescholarship:10.31223/osf.io/edu5f
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spelling crescholarship:10.31223/osf.io/edu5f 2024-04-07T07:51:23+00:00 Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin Eide, Christian Klausen, Tore Katkov, Denis Suslova, Anna Helland-Hansen, William 2019 http://dx.doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/edu5f unknown California Digital Library (CDL) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode posted-content 2019 crescholarship https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/edu5f 2024-03-08T03:58:03Z Present-day catchments adjacent to sedimentary basins may preserve geomorphic elements that have been active through long intervals of time. Relicts of ancient catchments in present-day landscapes may be investigated using mass-balance models and can give important information about upland landscape evolution and reservoir distribution in adjacent basins. However, such methods are in their infancy and often difficult to apply in deep-time settings due to later landscape modification. The Southern Barents Sea Margin of N Norway and NW Russia is ideal for investigating source-to-sink models, as it has been subject to minor tectonic activity since the Carboniferous, and large parts have eluded significant Quaternary glacial erosion. A zone close-to the present-day coast has likely acted as the boundary between basin and catchments since the Carboniferous. Around the Permian-Triassic transition, a large delta-system started to prograde from the same area as the present-day largest river in the area: the Tana River. The Tana River has long been interpreted to show features indicating that it was developed prior to present-day topography, and we perform a source-to-sink study of this ancient system in order to investigate potential linkages between present-day geomorphology and ancient deposits.We investigate sediment load of the ancient delta using well, core, 2D-, and 3D-seismic data, and digital elevation models to investigate the geomorphology of the onshore catchment and surrounding areas. Our results imply that the present-day Tana catchment was formed close to the Permian-Triassic transition, and that the Triassic delta-system has much better reservoir properties compared to the rest of Triassic basin infill. This implies that landscapes may indeed preserve catchment geometries for extended periods of time, and demonstrate that source-to-sink techniques can be instrumental in predicting extent and quality of subsurface reservoirs. Other/Unknown Material Barents Sea eScholarship Repository (University of California) Barents Sea Norway Tana River ENVELOPE(28.395,28.395,70.503,70.503)
institution Open Polar
collection eScholarship Repository (University of California)
op_collection_id crescholarship
language unknown
description Present-day catchments adjacent to sedimentary basins may preserve geomorphic elements that have been active through long intervals of time. Relicts of ancient catchments in present-day landscapes may be investigated using mass-balance models and can give important information about upland landscape evolution and reservoir distribution in adjacent basins. However, such methods are in their infancy and often difficult to apply in deep-time settings due to later landscape modification. The Southern Barents Sea Margin of N Norway and NW Russia is ideal for investigating source-to-sink models, as it has been subject to minor tectonic activity since the Carboniferous, and large parts have eluded significant Quaternary glacial erosion. A zone close-to the present-day coast has likely acted as the boundary between basin and catchments since the Carboniferous. Around the Permian-Triassic transition, a large delta-system started to prograde from the same area as the present-day largest river in the area: the Tana River. The Tana River has long been interpreted to show features indicating that it was developed prior to present-day topography, and we perform a source-to-sink study of this ancient system in order to investigate potential linkages between present-day geomorphology and ancient deposits.We investigate sediment load of the ancient delta using well, core, 2D-, and 3D-seismic data, and digital elevation models to investigate the geomorphology of the onshore catchment and surrounding areas. Our results imply that the present-day Tana catchment was formed close to the Permian-Triassic transition, and that the Triassic delta-system has much better reservoir properties compared to the rest of Triassic basin infill. This implies that landscapes may indeed preserve catchment geometries for extended periods of time, and demonstrate that source-to-sink techniques can be instrumental in predicting extent and quality of subsurface reservoirs.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Eide, Christian
Klausen, Tore
Katkov, Denis
Suslova, Anna
Helland-Hansen, William
spellingShingle Eide, Christian
Klausen, Tore
Katkov, Denis
Suslova, Anna
Helland-Hansen, William
Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
author_facet Eide, Christian
Klausen, Tore
Katkov, Denis
Suslova, Anna
Helland-Hansen, William
author_sort Eide, Christian
title Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
title_short Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
title_full Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
title_fullStr Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
title_full_unstemmed Linking an Early Triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern Barents Sea margin
title_sort linking an early triassic delta to antecedent topography: source-to-sink study of the southwestern barents sea margin
publisher California Digital Library (CDL)
publishDate 2019
url http://dx.doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/edu5f
long_lat ENVELOPE(28.395,28.395,70.503,70.503)
geographic Barents Sea
Norway
Tana River
geographic_facet Barents Sea
Norway
Tana River
genre Barents Sea
genre_facet Barents Sea
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
op_doi https://doi.org/10.31223/osf.io/edu5f
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