The Paleoproterozoic Grythyttan Field in the Svecofennian Orogen, West Bergslagen, Central Sweden: Structure, Stratigraphy and Age.

A number of discrete slate belts of limited size occur in the Paleoproterozoic volcano-sedimentary Bergslagen Group of western Bergslagen in the Fennoscandian shield of south central Sweden. The Grythyttan Slate Belt, studied for more than a century, forms a single basin with the nearby Saxån Slate...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Norwegian Journal of Geology
Main Authors: Beunk, F.F., Kuipers, Gerrit, Yi, Keewook, van der Wateren, Frederik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.vu.nl/en/publications/10783cda-5b9a-49c8-a30a-b389c9f8bf59
https://doi.org/10.17850/njg98-3-05
https://hdl.handle.net/1871.1/10783cda-5b9a-49c8-a30a-b389c9f8bf59
Description
Summary:A number of discrete slate belts of limited size occur in the Paleoproterozoic volcano-sedimentary Bergslagen Group of western Bergslagen in the Fennoscandian shield of south central Sweden. The Grythyttan Slate Belt, studied for more than a century, forms a single basin with the nearby Saxån Slate Belt. We use the lithostratigraphy of the Grythyttan Slate Formation of the Grythyttan belt, based on basin scale sedimentary facies associations of the volcaniclastic sediments in time and space, as a method to interpret overall tectonic structure. Contrary to traditional views, we reconstruct the GSB as a single overturned limb of a km-scale anticline with horizontal axis in the hanging wall of an east vergent thrust fault, reactivating a listric extensional fault. The fold connects the GSB to the neighboring SSB. Folding and thrusting were related to tectonic closure of a volcanic back- or intra-arc basin. The early folds were subsequently affected by strike-slip shearing and folding around vertical fold axes, which partitioned preferentially into the least competent lithologies (slates and marbles), significantly modifying the map appearance of the slate belt. The late shearing and folding resulted from accretion of Bergslagen onto the Fennoscandian continental margin during the late, Svecobaltic phase of the Svecofennian orogeny. The GSB forms a thin, intraformational wedge in the Bergslagen Group and represents a relatively short interlude with a conglomeratic alluvial fan and turbiditic volcaniclastics followed by more felsic volcanic rocks resembling those of the Bergslagen Group. We suggest that the GSB, and by inference the other slate belts, stem from calderas, as either terrestrial volcanic lakes or shallow submarine eruption centers. The conglomerates are pre-orogenic, not a post-orogenic molasse, as traditionally conceived, and their clast fabric has resulted from sedimentary processes only. Newly determined SIMS U-Pb zircon ages constrain the age of the GSB at ca. 1895 Ma.