Eurasia Basin and Gakkel Ridge, Arctic Ocean: Crustal asymmetry, ultra-slow spreading and continental rifting revealed by new seismic data

High Arctic new seismic data, collected by Russian Federation from 2011 to 2014, and additional geological and geophysical information, are used to interpret the basement and sedimentary structure of central and eastern Eurasia Basin, the Gakkel Ridge, and their transition into the Laptev Sea. We fi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Tectonophysics
Main Authors: Nikishin, AM, Gaina, Carmen, Petrov, E.I., Malyshev, NA, Freiman, SI
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/72327
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-75431
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2017.09.006
Description
Summary:High Arctic new seismic data, collected by Russian Federation from 2011 to 2014, and additional geological and geophysical information, are used to interpret the basement and sedimentary structure of central and eastern Eurasia Basin, the Gakkel Ridge, and their transition into the Laptev Sea. We find that significant changes in basement topography occur in Nansen Basin at C20 (43.43 Ma) and in the Amundsen basins at C21 (45.7 Ma), and in both basins at C13 (33 Ma). A long seismic profile, that documents for the first time the structure of conjugate flanks and their margins in the central-eastern Eurasia Basin, confirms that oceanic accretion was asymmetric, with 10% less crust developed in the Amundsen Basin since continental break-up. In the eastern Amundsen Basin, we observe mid-ocean ridge uplift since C13 (33 Ma). We identify four distinct sedimentary packages in the Eurasia Basin: Early to Mid Eocene (c. 56 to 45.7 Ma), Mid Eocene to Early Oligocene (45.7 to 33.2 Ma), Early Oligocene to Early Miocene (33.2 to 19.7) and Early Miocene to Present (19.7 to 0 Ma); they are linked to the oceanic lithosphere age determined from magnetic data. The deepest part of the Gakkel Ridge (5215 m), situated close to the easternmost part of this mid ocean ridge, is imaged for the first time by seismic data that reveals volcanic constructions within the older axial ridges and on the flanks. Gakkel Ridge's asymmetric flanks with shallow, regularly-spaced, and rugged structure, typical to ultra-slow spreading ridges, imply periodicity of tectonic phases. The Khatanga-Lomonosov Fault between Lomonosov Ridge and the Laptev Sea region, is identified on few seismic profiles; kinematic models predict that it may have been active only for a maximum of 10 myr after continental break-up.