Regional Tectonic and Environmental Assessments of the Norwegian Polar Regions using Potential Field Methods

Interest for the polar regions has increased during the last few decades. New technologies now allow to conduct research in this hostile environment. Tectonic history and timing of the opening of the Arctic is the key to understand the geological framework of this area. Climate and environmental res...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Journal International
Main Author: Dumais, Marie-Andrée
Other Authors: Brönner, Marco, Smelror, Morten, Johansen, Ståle Emil
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2977180
Description
Summary:Interest for the polar regions has increased during the last few decades. New technologies now allow to conduct research in this hostile environment. Tectonic history and timing of the opening of the Arctic is the key to understand the geological framework of this area. Climate and environmental research necessitate a deeper understanding of the polar regions to model the global ecosystem and create robust global weather and climate change prediction scenarios. In this work, we addressed the Norwegian Polar Regions by studying the spreading of the Knipovich Ridge, the regional tectonic of the Fram Strait and the Svalbard Margin, the thermal activity and fluid circulation of Loki’s Castle and its surroundings, and the bed topography and geology under Austfonna icecap. All these facets of the Norwegian Polar Regions have been investigated with a common methodology: potential fields theory. We developed tools to recognize the underground settings of various types of environment at different scale within the Norwegian Arctic. The data interpretation and analysis are mainly based on 2-D forward modelling, 3-D inversion modelling, Werner deconvolution and plate tectonic reconstruction. Newly acquired aeromagnetic data revealed several fracture zones and lineaments in the Fram Strait. The high-resolution data identified the magnetic isochrons of the Knipovich Ridge. The ridge spreading initiated at C6 (20 Ma) and a ridge jump occurred at C5E. The 2-D magnetic and gravity forward modelling interpreted the crustal and thermal heterogeneities of the Fram Strait and Svalbard Margin. The crustal domains were consequently delineated and confirmed with the Werner deconvolution and Curie point depth estimation. The 3-D magnetic inversion modelling identified zone with weak magnetization along the rift valley correlated with the absence of volcanic and bathymetric rise evidence. The continent-ocean boundary on the east margin is relocated up to 160 km west of the location set by previous studies. With an autonomous underwater ...