Structural evolution of the reactivated Møre–Trøndelag Fault Complex, Fosen Peninsula, Norway

The ENE–WSW-trending Møre–Trøndelag Fault Complex (MTFC) in Central Norway is a 10–50 km-wide, steeply dipping reactivated fault zone. Onshore, it transects Devonian sedimentary rocks and a series of east to SE transported metamorphic nappes, which were emplaced during the Scandian (Silurian–Devonia...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Geological Society
Main Authors: Watts, Lee M., Holdsworth, Robert E., Roberts, David, Sleight, Janine M., Walker, Richard J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Geological Society of London 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dro.dur.ac.uk/38420/
http://dro.dur.ac.uk/38420/1/38420.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2022-139
Description
Summary:The ENE–WSW-trending Møre–Trøndelag Fault Complex (MTFC) in Central Norway is a 10–50 km-wide, steeply dipping reactivated fault zone. Onshore, it transects Devonian sedimentary rocks and a series of east to SE transported metamorphic nappes, which were emplaced during the Scandian (Silurian–Devonian) Orogeny. Offshore, the MTFC defines the southern margin of the Møre Basin and the northern margin of the Viking Graben, meaning that the fault complex played a major role in controlling the architecture of these Mesozoic basins. Onshore, the MTFC has had a prolonged and heterogeneous kinematic history. The complex comprises two major fault strands: the Hitra–Snåsa Fault (HSF) and the Verran Fault (VF). These two faults seem to have broadly initiated as part of a single system of sinistral ductile shear zones during the early Devonian (c. 410 Ma). Sinistral transtensional reactivation (Permo-Carboniferous; 290 Ma) of the ENE–WSW-trending HSF and VF led to the development of cataclasites and pseudotachylites together with the formation of north–south-trending faults establishing the present-day brittle fault geometry of the MTFC. Later phases of Mesozoic reactivation focused along the Verran Fault Zone (VFZ) and north–south-linking structures were probably related to mid- to late Jurassic to early Cretaceous rifting and late Cretaceous to early Cenozoic opening of the North Atlantic.