The passive margins of northern Europe and east-Greenland

Author(s):  
Olav Eldholm ◽  
Manik Talwani
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johan M. Bonow ◽  
Peter Japsen ◽  
Paul F. Green ◽  
James A. Chalmers

<p>Many passive continental margins around the world are characterised by elevated plateaus at 1 to 2 km or more above sea level cut by deeply incised valleys and commonly separated from an adjacent coastal plain by one or more escarpments. Mesozoic–Cenozoic rift systems parallel to the coast are commonly present offshore with a transition from continental to oceanic crust further offshore. These landscapes occur in arctic, temperate and tropical climate and in different geological settings independent of the time span since break-up (e.g. along the Atlantic from south to north).</p><p>The plateaux are typically more than 100 km wide, much larger in some cases, and extend hundreds of kilometres along the margin, cutting across bedrock of different ages and resistances. The key to understanding the formation of regional, low-relief erosion surfaces is the base-level, as this is the level to which fluvial systems grade the landscape. The most likely base level is sea level, particularly for locations along continental margins during the post-rift development of passive margins.</p><p>It is commonly assumed that the characteristic, large-scale morphology of elevated, passive continental margins with  high-level plateaux and deeply incised valleys persisted since rifting and crustal separation Further, it is assumed that the absence of post-rift sediments is evidence of non-deposition, despite continental-stretching theory predicting deposition of a thick post-rift sequence overlying both the rift and its margins.</p><p>However, our studies of the passive continental margins of West and East Greenland, Norway, NE Brazil and southern Africa provide evidence of km-scale, post-rift subsidence and that the plateau surfaces were graded to sea level long after break-up and subsequently lifted to their present elevations. In some of these cases, the presence of post-rift marine sediments at high elevation provide direct proof of this interpretation. Since elevated plateaux cut by deeply incised valleys are a characteristic feature of these and other margins, this similarity suggests that such topography elsewhere in the world may also be unrelated to the processes of rifting and continental separation. We present a wide range of evidence from passive margins around the world in support of this hypothesis,</p><p> </p><p>Bonow et al. 2014: High-level landscapes along the margin of East Greenland – a record of tectonic uplift and incision after breakup in the NE Atlantic. Global and Planetary Change.</p><p>Green et al. 2018: Post-breakup burial and exhumation of passive continental margins: Seven propositions to inform geodynamic models. Gondwana Research.</p><p>Japsen et al. 2019: Elevated passive continental margins: Numerical modeling vs observations. A comment on Braun (2018). Gondwana Research.</p>


1994 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 73-79
Author(s):  
H.C Larsen ◽  
A Saunders ◽  
L.M Larsen ◽  
H Lykke-Andersen ◽  
ODP Leg 152 shipboard party ◽  
...  

Two main types of passive margins known as volcanic and non-volcanic rifted margins, based on the extent of volcanic activity associated with their formation, are widely recognised. Volcanic rifted margins have now been identified along the edges of many continents (Coffin & Eldholm, 1992) and cannot any longer be considered as rare exceptions to 'normal' (non-volcanic) continental break-up.


1993 ◽  
Vol 57 (4) ◽  
pp. 312-317
Author(s):  
NH Wilson ◽  
A Richards ◽  
J Laverock ◽  
MS Purkiss

2010 ◽  
pp. 100080510134803
Author(s):  
Valerie Brown
Keyword(s):  

PCI Journal ◽  
1958 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 10-15
Author(s):  
Ben C. Gerwick, Jr

1934 ◽  
Vol s5-27 (160) ◽  
pp. 307-309
Author(s):  
C. Schuchert
Keyword(s):  

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