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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received July 29, 1996; revised manuscript received
February 11, 1997; final acceptance September 11, 1997.
2British Geological Survey, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG,
United Kingdom.
3BP Norge UA, Forusbeen 35, Postboks 197, 4033 Forus, Norway.
Our thanks to BP Norge for permission to publish this work. We are
also grateful to the operators and their partners in exploration licenses
PL154, PL155, PL093, PL094, PL095, PL122, PL126, PL080, and PL177, and
the IKU and CASP for providing samples and for giving permission to publish
the heavy mineral data. Peter Haughton at Badley Ashton and Associates
is thanked for providing most of the sedimentological descriptions for
the Cretaceous intervals. This paper is published with the approval of
the Director, British Geological Survey (NERC).
ABSTRACT
Previous sedimentological models for the Cretaceous of the Norwegian
Sea suggest that sand deposition occurred as slumps and debris flows along
the continental slope, resulting in discontinuous and unpredictable sandstone
units, unless they become amalgamated into thick reservoir sequences. The
mineralogical evidence indicates that this model can be applied only to
sandstone types K1 and K3. By contrast, sandstone type K2 represents sediment
introduced from the conjugate margin of the basin and occurs up to 200
km from its detrital source region; therefore, K2 is likely to occur as
more predictable, sheetlike bodies on the basin floor.
Deep-water Cretaceous sandstones in the Norwegian Sea were deposited
by a number of distinct sediment transport systems tapping different sediment
source terrains. Three distinct sandstone types (K1, K2, and K3) have been
identified, distinguished, and mapped on the basis of a combination of
heavy mineral parameters. Sandstone type K1 occurs on the Trøndelag
Platform, Halten Terrace, and Nordland Ridge, but does not appear to be
present in the deeper water Vøring Basin. Sandstone type K1 was
ultimately derived from the Scandinavian landmass with detritus sourced
from metasediments of the Caledonian fold belt, intrusives of the Trans-Scandinavian
Igneous belt, and, to a smaller extent, Svecofennian basement. K1 sandstones
were deposited on an unstable slope by debris flows and slumps, with minor
reworking by bottom currents. Sand stone type K3 was derived from the Western
Gneiss region farther south on the Scandinavian landmass. Sandstone type
K2 occurs in more basinal locations in the Norwegian Sea and was not supplied
by the systems operating along the Scandinavian margin because its mineralogy
contrasts with that of K1 and K3. K2 mineralogy is not consistent with
a source in the Lofoten area or East Greenland; therefore, K2 is believed
to represent the deposits of a separate axial transport system fed by a
source that lay in northeast Greenland. K2 zircon ages indicate involvement
of Early Proterozoic (approximately 2000 Ma) and Archean basement, together
with metasediments of the Caledonian fold belt.
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