Early opening history of the North Atlantic -- I. Structure and origin of the Faeroe--Shetland Escarpment

Marine geophysical surveys show that the Escarpment is the buried feather-edge of a thick pile of flood basalts of early Eocene age, overlying a thinner, more widespread layer of basalts of late Palaeocene age. The Escarpment does not, therefore, define the continent—ocean boundary in the southern N...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Journal International
Main Authors: Smythe, D. K., Chalmers, J. A., Skuce, A. G., Dobinson, A., Mould, A. S.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1983
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Online Access:http://gji.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/72/2/373
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.1983.tb03791.x
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Summary:Marine geophysical surveys show that the Escarpment is the buried feather-edge of a thick pile of flood basalts of early Eocene age, overlying a thinner, more widespread layer of basalts of late Palaeocene age. The Escarpment does not, therefore, define the continent—ocean boundary in the southern Norwegian Sea, but instead marks the contemporary shoreline separating terrestrially erupted basalt flows in the north from a restricted shallow-water shelf to the south. The basalts overlie 5–6 km of Mesozoic sediments, which have completely buried a large conical flat-topped seamount of similar dimensions to Anton Dohrn and Rosemary Bank. We call this newly postulated body the Brendan seamount. The Mesozoic sediments are at least as old as early Cretaceous in age, therefore precluding the possibility that the mid-Cretaceous seafloor spreading episode (supposed by some to have created the Rockall Trough) could have also created the thin crust inferred to underlie the Faeroe—Shetland Trough and Møre Basin.