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Widespread glacial erosion on the Scandinavian passive margin: COMMENT
Preservation of late Paleozoic glacial rock surfaces by burial prior to Cenozoic exhumation, Fleurieu Peninsula, Southeastern Australia
Thermal history reconstruction from apatite fission-track analysis and vitrinite reflectance data of the Bongor Basin, the Republic of Chad
Mountains of southernmost Norway: uplifted Miocene peneplains and re-exposed Mesozoic surfaces
Abstract We present a consistent synthesis of palaeothermal (apatite fission track analysis (AFTA) and vitrinite reflectance) data from UK Southern North Sea wells with the regional pattern of exhumation defined from sonic velocity data. Cenozoic exhumation across most of the region began in the Paleocene between 63 and 59 Ma. Amounts of removed section are around 1 km across the offshore platform, increasing to 2 km or more on the Sole Pit axis. Neogene exhumation within this area began between 22 and 15 Ma, and led to removal of up to 1 km of section. Along the eastern flank of the Sole Pit axis, sonic data define a pre-Chalk event, and AFTA data from these wells show that exhumation began between 120 and 93 Ma. This timing correlates with events defined from AFTA data in the Sorgenfrei–Tornquist Zone, further east, presumably reflecting a response to regional tectonic stresses. East of the Sole Pit axis, AFTA and sonic velocities suggest that Neogene exhumation dominates, while further east towards the central parts of the North Sea Mesozoic sediments appear to be at maximum burial today except for local effects related to salt movement. The multiple episodes of exhumation and burial defined here have important implications for exploration.
Abstract A series of cooling events in the development of the Namibe margin of Angola is defined by apatite fission track analysis data from samples of outcropping Cretaceous sandstones and crystalline Precambrian basement. Regional exhumation in the Late Carboniferous–Early Permian and Jurassic preceded Early Cretaceous rifting. Further episodes of uplift and erosion affected the margin in the Early and Late Cretaceous before it was buried by up to 2 km of post-break-up section, which was subsequently removed during Cenozoic uplift and erosion beginning between 35 and 20 Ma. This timing is consistent with published analyses of river profiles suggesting that uplift of the margin began at c. 30 Ma. Estimates of between 1.5 and 2 km of section removed during Cenozoic exhumation are consistent with burial depths estimated from the diagenesis of former evaporite horizons now at outcrop. These results add further support to a growing body of evidence showing that the evolution of ‘passive’ margins is anything but passive. The key episodes of exhumation defined in this study are broadly synchronous with events identified in many areas of the West Africa margin from Namibia to Equatorial Guinea and are regarded as representing a continent-scale response to stresses related to tectonic plate movements.
Quantifying Cretaceous–Cenozoic exhumation in the Otway Basin, southeastern Australia, using sonic transit time data: Implications for conventional and unconventional hydrocarbon prospectivity
Detrital zircon data reveal the origin of Australia’s largest delta system
Episodic burial and exhumation in NE Brazil after opening of the South Atlantic
Thermal History Reconstruction in Sedimentary Basins using Apatite Fission-Track Analysis and Related Techniques
Abstract While several methods have been developed for assessing the magnitude of postdepositional heating of sedimentary rocks, apatite fission track analysis (AFTA ) can also define the time at which a sedimentary rock cooled from its maximum postdepositional temperature, up to ~110° C. This information is particularly important in hydrocarbon exploration, e.g., in defining the timing of hydrocarbon generation and identifying regions where the main phase of generation postdates formation of potential trapping structures. Based on analysis of naturally occurring radiation damage features (fission tracks) in detrital apatite grains, the foundation of the technique is a detailed understanding of the kinetics of fission-track “annealing,incorporating observations from both laboratory and geological field conditions and making explicit allowance for apatite composition (chlorine content), which exerts a crucial influence over fission-track annealing kinetics. The thermal response of fission tracks is dominated by the maximum postdepositional paleotemperature, and this fundamental aspect of the technique imposes strict limitations on the information that can be obtained. In particular, no information can be obtained on the thermal history prior to the onset of cooling from the maximum postdepositional temperature. However, one or possibly two additional episodes of heating and cooling can often be resolved following the paleo–thermal maximum. Integration of AFTA data with paleotemperature estimates from other methods, in particular vitrinite reflectance (VR), provides additional support for thermal history interpretations and can often help to refine solutions from AFTA. Most importantly, the combined use of AFTA and VR in a vertical sequence allows construction of profiles of paleotemperature with depth (or elevation), enabling quantitative determination of paleogeothermal gradient, which in turn allows identification of the mechanisms of heating and cooling. Heating due to deeper burial produces a linear paleotemperature profile with a similar gradient to the present temperature profile, whereas heating due primarily to increased basal heat flow will produce a profile with a higher gradient than the present temperature profile. Extrapolation of such profiles above the appropriate unconformity identified from AFTA to a suitable paleo–surface temperature allows determination of the magnitude of additional burial responsible for the observed heating. Estimations of additional burial in this way depend on assumptions concerning the lithology (i.e., thermal conductivity) of the eroded sequence and wherever possible should be combined with estimates of burial based on nonthermal processes, such as sonic velocity, in order to provide consistent constraints on the burial history. Nonlinear profiles are produced by contact heating around intrusive bodies and by passage of hot fluids within confined aquifer horizons. More complex situations that involve nonlinear profiles resulting from thick sequences with extreme thermal conductivities (e.g., coal or salt) can also be assessed by inspection of the variation of paleotemperature with depth. AFTA has been applied to hydrocarbon exploration in a wide variety of settings. Some of the most important outcomes of AFTA analysis, in terms of events that affect regional hydrocarbon prospectivity, are: (1) the recognition of regional kilometer-scale exhumation (implying earlier deeper burial), often in areas that have traditionally been considered stable; (2) definition of major Phanerozoic paleo–thermal events in Proterozoic basins; and (3) revelation of the importance of hot fluids in transporting heat in sedimentary basins. In basins with complex histories, for example, exhumed basins or those in which heat flow was higher in the past, AFTA can provide unique constraints on the timing of hydrocarbon generation, which can significantly reduce exploration risk in such areas.
Reply to discussion on ‘Multiple post-Caledonian exhumation episodes across NW Scotland revealed by apatite fission-track analysis': Journal , Vol. 167, 675–694
Thermochronology, erosion surfaces and missing section in West Greenland
Cenozoic post-rift sedimentation off northwest Britain: Recording the detritus of episodic uplift on a passive continental margin
Multiple post-Caledonian exhumation episodes across NW Scotland revealed by apatite fission-track analysis
Palaeocene–early Eocene inversion of the Phuquoc–Kampot Som Basin: SE Asian deformation associated with the suturing of Luconia
Regional intraplate exhumation episodes related to plate-boundary deformation
Mesozoic–Cenozoic exhumation and volcanism in Northern Ireland constrained by AFTA and compaction data from the Larne No. 2 borehole
Cenozoic exhumation of the southern British Isles
Evidence for kilometre-scale Neogene exhumation driven by compressional deformation in the Irish Sea basin system
Abstract Large tracts of the NW European continental shelf and Atlantic margin have experienced kilometre-scale exhumation during the Cenozoic, the timing and causes of which are debated. There is particular uncertainty about the exhumation history of the Irish Sea basin system, Western UK, which has been suggested to be a focal point of Cenozoic exhumation across the NW European continental shelf. Many studies have attributed the exhumation of this region to processes associated with the early Palaeogene initiation of the Iceland Plume, whilst the magnitude and causes of Neogene exhumation have attracted little attention. However, the sedimentary basins of the southern Irish Sea contain a mid–late Cenozoic sedimentary succession up to 1.5 km in thickness, the analysis of which should permit the contributions of Palaeogene and Neogene events to the Cenozoic exhumation of this region to be separated. In this paper, an analysis of the palaeothermal, mechanical and structural properties of the Cenozoic succession is presented with the aim of quantifying the timing and magnitude of Neogene exhumation, and identifying its ultimate causes. Synthesis of an extensive apatite fission-track analysis (AFTA), vitrinite reflectance (VR) and compaction (sonic velocity and density log-derived porosities) database shows that the preserved Cenozoic sediments in the southern Irish Sea were more deeply buried by up to 1.5 km of additional section prior to exhumation which began between 20 and 15 Ma. Maximum burial depths of the preserved sedimentary succession in the St George’s Channel Basin were reached during mid–late Cenozoic times meaning that no evidence for early Palaeogene exhumation is preserved whereas AFTA data from the Mochras borehole (onshore NW Wales) show that early Palaeogene cooling (i.e. exhumation) at this location was not significant. Seismic reflection data indicate that compressional shortening was the principal driving mechanism for the Neogene exhumation of the southern Irish Sea. Coeval Neogene shortening and exhumation is observed in several sedimentary basins around the British Isles, including those along the UK Atlantic margin. This suggests that the forces responsible for the deformation and exhumation of the margin may also be responsible for the generation of kilometre-scale exhumation in an intraplate sedimentary basin system located >1000 km from the most proximal plate boundary. The results presented here show that compressional deformation has made an important contribution to the Neogene exhumation of the NW European continental shelf.