Ordovician stratigraphy in the western Helgeland Nappe Complex in the Brønnøysund area, North-central Norway.

In the western part of the Helgeland Nappe Complex, a small ophiolite fragment (the Bolvær Complex) and a metasedimentary succession (the Brønnøysund Group) are exposed on several islands to the west of Brønnøysund. The Bolvær Complex was emplaced, uplifted and subject to subaerial weathering and er...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Heldal, Tom
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2674124
Description
Summary:In the western part of the Helgeland Nappe Complex, a small ophiolite fragment (the Bolvær Complex) and a metasedimentary succession (the Brønnøysund Group) are exposed on several islands to the west of Brønnøysund. The Bolvær Complex was emplaced, uplifted and subject to subaerial weathering and erosion prior to the deposition of the Brønnøysund Group. The uncomformity defines an irregular topographic surface which was gradually filled with sediments during a regional transgression, probably influenced by active tectonics. The sedimentation of the Brønnøysund Group initially started with the build-up of a coastal setting, delivering coarse and fince clastiscs into a shallow-marine environment (Risøy Formation). This formation is stratigraphically overlain by calcareous turbidites (Torgnes Formation), pelites (Aspøy Formation) and carbonate rocks (Toftsund Formation). The Brønnøysund Group is correlated with several cover sequences above ophiolites in the Helgeland Nappe Complex, and deposition in Early to Middle Orodovician time is suggested. The clast population in conglomerates and the composition of finer clastic sediments show an exotic, ensialic source for the detritus, in addition to the ophiolite. The ensialic source consisted essentially ofpsammites and schists, deformed and metamorphosed prior to the deposition of the Brønnøysund Group. 49802