A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway

A geophysical investigation of the continental margin between Norway and the Faeroe Islands has been carried out, utilizing gravity, magnetic, bathymetric, seismic refraction and seismic reflection data. Detailed analysis of this data has shown that the boundary between the oceanic-type crust beneat...

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Main Author: Robinson, J.
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 1980
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/1/7426_4491.PDF
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spelling ftunidurhamethes:oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:7426 2023-05-15T16:29:54+02:00 A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway Robinson, J. 1980 application/pdf http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/ http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/1/7426_4491.PDF unknown oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:7426 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/1/7426_4491.PDF Robinson, J. (1980) A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway. Doctoral thesis, Durham University. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/ Thesis NonPeerReviewed 1980 ftunidurhamethes 2022-09-23T14:14:39Z A geophysical investigation of the continental margin between Norway and the Faeroe Islands has been carried out, utilizing gravity, magnetic, bathymetric, seismic refraction and seismic reflection data. Detailed analysis of this data has shown that the boundary between the oceanic-type crust beneath the Norwegian Basin and the continental-type crust of North-West Europe does not lie along the Faeroe-Shetland Escarpment as suggested by Talwani and co-authors. The line of splitting between the More region and Greenland has been identified as lying just to the south-east of magnetic anomaly 24 within the eastern Norwegian Basin. This is supported by seismic reflection and gravity evidence. Gravity data over the margin has been interpreted as revealing a zone of anomalously thin crust which may mark a north-eastern extension of the Faeroe-Shetland Channel. It is separated from the Norwegian Basin by a zone of rather thick crust forming a spur from the Faeroes Block. It is proposed that the zone of anomalously thin crust be known as the East Faeroes Trough. Within the Norwegian Basin the magnetic data confirms that the sea-floor spreading anomalies form a fan-shaped pattern narrower in the south than in the north. Seismic reflection data within the central portion of the basin shows rough and undulating basement topography, with many basement peaks, some of which form the seamounts detected on earlier bathymetric surveys. It has been tentatively suggested that the basement peaks and lack of correlatable magnetic anomalies in the centre of the basin are due to the continual westward migration of the spreading axis. Thesis Greenland Durham University: Durham e-Theses Greenland Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Durham University: Durham e-Theses
op_collection_id ftunidurhamethes
language unknown
description A geophysical investigation of the continental margin between Norway and the Faeroe Islands has been carried out, utilizing gravity, magnetic, bathymetric, seismic refraction and seismic reflection data. Detailed analysis of this data has shown that the boundary between the oceanic-type crust beneath the Norwegian Basin and the continental-type crust of North-West Europe does not lie along the Faeroe-Shetland Escarpment as suggested by Talwani and co-authors. The line of splitting between the More region and Greenland has been identified as lying just to the south-east of magnetic anomaly 24 within the eastern Norwegian Basin. This is supported by seismic reflection and gravity evidence. Gravity data over the margin has been interpreted as revealing a zone of anomalously thin crust which may mark a north-eastern extension of the Faeroe-Shetland Channel. It is separated from the Norwegian Basin by a zone of rather thick crust forming a spur from the Faeroes Block. It is proposed that the zone of anomalously thin crust be known as the East Faeroes Trough. Within the Norwegian Basin the magnetic data confirms that the sea-floor spreading anomalies form a fan-shaped pattern narrower in the south than in the north. Seismic reflection data within the central portion of the basin shows rough and undulating basement topography, with many basement peaks, some of which form the seamounts detected on earlier bathymetric surveys. It has been tentatively suggested that the basement peaks and lack of correlatable magnetic anomalies in the centre of the basin are due to the continual westward migration of the spreading axis.
format Thesis
author Robinson, J.
spellingShingle Robinson, J.
A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
author_facet Robinson, J.
author_sort Robinson, J.
title A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
title_short A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
title_full A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
title_fullStr A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
title_full_unstemmed A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway
title_sort geophysical study of the continental margin west of norway
publishDate 1980
url http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/1/7426_4491.PDF
geographic Greenland
Norway
geographic_facet Greenland
Norway
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_relation oai:etheses.dur.ac.uk:7426
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/1/7426_4491.PDF
Robinson, J. (1980) A geophysical study of the continental margin west of Norway. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7426/
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