Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.

This report constitutes the itinerary for a two-day field excursion to postglacial faults and rock avalanches in northern Troms and western Finnmark. Day 1 has three stops along the route from Tromsø to Nordmannvikdalen in Kåfjord, Troms. Day 2 has two localities along the Stuoragurra fault in Masi....

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Main Authors: Dehls, John, Olesen, Odleiv, Blikra, Lars Harald, Olsen, Lars
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2665561
id ftnorgesgu:oai:openarchive.ngu.no:11250/2665561
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnorgesgu:oai:openarchive.ngu.no:11250/2665561 2023-05-15T16:12:17+02:00 Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark. Dehls, John Olesen, Odleiv Blikra, Lars Harald Olsen, Lars TROMS 16342 Kåfjord 19334 Masi KÅFJORD FINNMARK KAUTOKEINO 1999 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2665561 eng eng NGU-Rapport (99.082) urn:issn:0800-3416 https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2665561 Navngivelse 4.0 Internasjonal http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.no CC-BY 34 GEOLOGISK RISIKO LANDHEVNING NEOTEKTONIKK SEISMOLOGI SKRED FORKASTNING Report 1999 ftnorgesgu 2022-07-03T15:26:50Z This report constitutes the itinerary for a two-day field excursion to postglacial faults and rock avalanches in northern Troms and western Finnmark. Day 1 has three stops along the route from Tromsø to Nordmannvikdalen in Kåfjord, Troms. Day 2 has two localities along the Stuoragurra fault in Masi. The Nordmannvikdalen and Stuoragurra faults are part of the Lapland province of postglacial faults which consists of nine reverse faults and two normal faults in northern Fennoscandia. The faulting was most likely associated with major earthquakes with magnitudes of 7-8 on Richters scale. \rThe reverse Stuoragurra fault has a length of 80 km and a scarp height of maximum 7 metres. The fault is located within the regional Mierujavri Sværholt Fault Zone which is of Proterozoic age. The fault cross-cuts glaciofluvial deposits and is consequently younger than 9600 C14 yars. During 1998, two trenches were made across the Stuoragurra Fault, between Kautokeino and Masi. For the first time, the fault was directly observed in the bedrock. The fault did not penetrate the overlying glacial materials, but rather folded them, forming a blind thrust. Large liquefaction and other deformation structures were found in the glaciofluvial sediments in both trenches. Veins of angular and subangular pebbles from the local bedrock (Masi Quartzite) penetrate more than 10 metres laterally from the thrust plane and into the sediments in the footwall. It is thought that these veins were possibly injected during the fault activity. Deformational structures seen in the trench can be explained as a result of one major fault event. \rThe normal Nordmannvikdalen fault has a length of 1.5-2 km and a scarp height of one metre. The fault is most likely due to a deep-seated deformation, but a gravitational origin can not be ruled out. Two rock avalanches in Nordnesfjellan and Manndalen in Lyngenfjorden, northern Troms are described. The avalanches in the area were most likely triggered by the large earthquakes which were formed during the postglacial ... Report Fennoscandia Finnmark Kåfjord Kautokeino Masi Tromsø Finnmark Lapland Troms NGU Open Archive (Geological Survey of Norway) in Kåfjord ENVELOPE(25.720,25.720,70.864,70.864) Kautokeino ENVELOPE(23.048,23.048,69.003,69.003) Manndalen ENVELOPE(20.550,20.550,69.600,69.600) Masi ENVELOPE(23.666,23.666,69.444,69.444) Nordmannvikdalen ENVELOPE(20.617,20.617,69.658,69.658) Stuoragurra ENVELOPE(23.402,23.402,69.359,69.359) Sværholt ENVELOPE(26.684,26.684,70.962,70.962) Tromsø
institution Open Polar
collection NGU Open Archive (Geological Survey of Norway)
op_collection_id ftnorgesgu
language English
topic GEOLOGISK RISIKO
LANDHEVNING
NEOTEKTONIKK
SEISMOLOGI
SKRED
FORKASTNING
spellingShingle GEOLOGISK RISIKO
LANDHEVNING
NEOTEKTONIKK
SEISMOLOGI
SKRED
FORKASTNING
Dehls, John
Olesen, Odleiv
Blikra, Lars Harald
Olsen, Lars
Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
topic_facet GEOLOGISK RISIKO
LANDHEVNING
NEOTEKTONIKK
SEISMOLOGI
SKRED
FORKASTNING
description This report constitutes the itinerary for a two-day field excursion to postglacial faults and rock avalanches in northern Troms and western Finnmark. Day 1 has three stops along the route from Tromsø to Nordmannvikdalen in Kåfjord, Troms. Day 2 has two localities along the Stuoragurra fault in Masi. The Nordmannvikdalen and Stuoragurra faults are part of the Lapland province of postglacial faults which consists of nine reverse faults and two normal faults in northern Fennoscandia. The faulting was most likely associated with major earthquakes with magnitudes of 7-8 on Richters scale. \rThe reverse Stuoragurra fault has a length of 80 km and a scarp height of maximum 7 metres. The fault is located within the regional Mierujavri Sværholt Fault Zone which is of Proterozoic age. The fault cross-cuts glaciofluvial deposits and is consequently younger than 9600 C14 yars. During 1998, two trenches were made across the Stuoragurra Fault, between Kautokeino and Masi. For the first time, the fault was directly observed in the bedrock. The fault did not penetrate the overlying glacial materials, but rather folded them, forming a blind thrust. Large liquefaction and other deformation structures were found in the glaciofluvial sediments in both trenches. Veins of angular and subangular pebbles from the local bedrock (Masi Quartzite) penetrate more than 10 metres laterally from the thrust plane and into the sediments in the footwall. It is thought that these veins were possibly injected during the fault activity. Deformational structures seen in the trench can be explained as a result of one major fault event. \rThe normal Nordmannvikdalen fault has a length of 1.5-2 km and a scarp height of one metre. The fault is most likely due to a deep-seated deformation, but a gravitational origin can not be ruled out. Two rock avalanches in Nordnesfjellan and Manndalen in Lyngenfjorden, northern Troms are described. The avalanches in the area were most likely triggered by the large earthquakes which were formed during the postglacial ...
format Report
author Dehls, John
Olesen, Odleiv
Blikra, Lars Harald
Olsen, Lars
author_facet Dehls, John
Olesen, Odleiv
Blikra, Lars Harald
Olsen, Lars
author_sort Dehls, John
title Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
title_short Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
title_full Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
title_fullStr Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
title_full_unstemmed Neotectonic excursion guide to Troms and Finnmark.
title_sort neotectonic excursion guide to troms and finnmark.
publishDate 1999
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2665561
op_coverage TROMS
16342 Kåfjord
19334 Masi
KÅFJORD
FINNMARK
KAUTOKEINO
long_lat ENVELOPE(25.720,25.720,70.864,70.864)
ENVELOPE(23.048,23.048,69.003,69.003)
ENVELOPE(20.550,20.550,69.600,69.600)
ENVELOPE(23.666,23.666,69.444,69.444)
ENVELOPE(20.617,20.617,69.658,69.658)
ENVELOPE(23.402,23.402,69.359,69.359)
ENVELOPE(26.684,26.684,70.962,70.962)
geographic in Kåfjord
Kautokeino
Manndalen
Masi
Nordmannvikdalen
Stuoragurra
Sværholt
Tromsø
geographic_facet in Kåfjord
Kautokeino
Manndalen
Masi
Nordmannvikdalen
Stuoragurra
Sværholt
Tromsø
genre Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Kåfjord
Kautokeino
Masi
Tromsø
Finnmark
Lapland
Troms
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Finnmark
Kåfjord
Kautokeino
Masi
Tromsø
Finnmark
Lapland
Troms
op_source 34
op_relation NGU-Rapport (99.082)
urn:issn:0800-3416
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2665561
op_rights Navngivelse 4.0 Internasjonal
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.no
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
_version_ 1765997564227747840