Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic

The East Greenland margin formed during subsequent rifting processes, which started around 55 Ma in the Greenland Basin. The last rift event, which created also the only deep water connection between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic, happened in the Fram Strait. These events, although closely...

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Main Author: Jokat, Wilfried
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/13072/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.23465
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spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:13072 2023-09-05T13:17:45+02:00 Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic Jokat, Wilfried 2005 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/13072/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.23465 unknown Jokat, W. orcid:0000-0002-7793-5854 (2005) Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic , InWaterTec2005 (31 Aug 2 Sept 2005) Session S-6 Frontier Exploration of Offshore Mineral and Energy Resources. . hdl:10013/epic.23465 EPIC3InWaterTec2005 (31 Aug 2 Sept 2005) Session S-6 Frontier Exploration of Offshore Mineral and Energy Resources. Conference notRev 2005 ftawi 2023-08-22T19:50:23Z The East Greenland margin formed during subsequent rifting processes, which started around 55 Ma in the Greenland Basin. The last rift event, which created also the only deep water connection between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic, happened in the Fram Strait. These events, although closely connected in time, have a different magmatic history. While the initial rifting was accompanied by voluminous emplacement of volcanic rocks on- and offshore, evidence for massive magmatism has not been found in the more northern basins.Recent deep seismic investigations in the Greenland Basin show that along the East Greenland margin, which formed during the initial stage of rifting, massive underplated bodies are present. A large negative magnetic anomaly, which strikes almost N-S close to the coast, seems to mark the western boundary at which the continental crust was strongly affected by the opening of the Greenland Sea. East of this magnetic anomaly the deep seismic data indicate that the crust in the continent-ocean boundary must be strongly intruded by magmatic material. Furthermore, the width of the continent-ocean transition is much wider than at the conjugate Vøring Plateau that bears considerable hydrocarbon deposits which are under intensive production.The next basin to the north, the Boreas Basin, seems to have a different structure. Seismic reflection profiles acquired from the margin slope into the deep basins suggest that this area was at least in part formed during ultra-slow spreading. The basement topography of the oceanic crust is very rough, and no clear spreading anomalies could be determined so far. However, little is known about the deeper structure of the Boreas Basin, its transition zone and the more western margins. The same is true for the region north of 78°N. Pack ice prevented so far any state of the art experiments to unravel e.g. the sedimentation and basin history. However, there are strong indications that an extensive salt province exists as far north as 81°N.Toward east, new ... Conference Object Arctic Arctic Ocean East Greenland Fram Strait Greenland Greenland Sea North Atlantic Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center) Arctic Arctic Ocean Boreas ENVELOPE(-3.933,-3.933,-71.300,-71.300) Boreas Basin ENVELOPE(1.000,1.000,77.500,77.500) Greenland Greenland Basin ENVELOPE(-5.000,-5.000,73.500,73.500) Vøring Plateau ENVELOPE(4.000,4.000,67.000,67.000)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description The East Greenland margin formed during subsequent rifting processes, which started around 55 Ma in the Greenland Basin. The last rift event, which created also the only deep water connection between the Arctic Ocean and the North Atlantic, happened in the Fram Strait. These events, although closely connected in time, have a different magmatic history. While the initial rifting was accompanied by voluminous emplacement of volcanic rocks on- and offshore, evidence for massive magmatism has not been found in the more northern basins.Recent deep seismic investigations in the Greenland Basin show that along the East Greenland margin, which formed during the initial stage of rifting, massive underplated bodies are present. A large negative magnetic anomaly, which strikes almost N-S close to the coast, seems to mark the western boundary at which the continental crust was strongly affected by the opening of the Greenland Sea. East of this magnetic anomaly the deep seismic data indicate that the crust in the continent-ocean boundary must be strongly intruded by magmatic material. Furthermore, the width of the continent-ocean transition is much wider than at the conjugate Vøring Plateau that bears considerable hydrocarbon deposits which are under intensive production.The next basin to the north, the Boreas Basin, seems to have a different structure. Seismic reflection profiles acquired from the margin slope into the deep basins suggest that this area was at least in part formed during ultra-slow spreading. The basement topography of the oceanic crust is very rough, and no clear spreading anomalies could be determined so far. However, little is known about the deeper structure of the Boreas Basin, its transition zone and the more western margins. The same is true for the region north of 78°N. Pack ice prevented so far any state of the art experiments to unravel e.g. the sedimentation and basin history. However, there are strong indications that an extensive salt province exists as far north as 81°N.Toward east, new ...
format Conference Object
author Jokat, Wilfried
spellingShingle Jokat, Wilfried
Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
author_facet Jokat, Wilfried
author_sort Jokat, Wilfried
title Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
title_short Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
title_full Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
title_fullStr Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic
title_sort results and perspectives of marine research off east greenland and in the northernmost atlantic
publishDate 2005
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/13072/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.23465
long_lat ENVELOPE(-3.933,-3.933,-71.300,-71.300)
ENVELOPE(1.000,1.000,77.500,77.500)
ENVELOPE(-5.000,-5.000,73.500,73.500)
ENVELOPE(4.000,4.000,67.000,67.000)
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Boreas
Boreas Basin
Greenland
Greenland Basin
Vøring Plateau
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Boreas
Boreas Basin
Greenland
Greenland Basin
Vøring Plateau
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
East Greenland
Fram Strait
Greenland
Greenland Sea
North Atlantic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
East Greenland
Fram Strait
Greenland
Greenland Sea
North Atlantic
op_source EPIC3InWaterTec2005 (31 Aug 2 Sept 2005) Session S-6 Frontier Exploration of Offshore Mineral and Energy Resources.
op_relation Jokat, W. orcid:0000-0002-7793-5854 (2005) Results and Perspectives of Marine Research off East Greenland and in the Northernmost Atlantic , InWaterTec2005 (31 Aug 2 Sept 2005) Session S-6 Frontier Exploration of Offshore Mineral and Energy Resources. . hdl:10013/epic.23465
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