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Geochronological constraints on Caledonian strike–slip displacement in Svalbard, with implications for the evolution of the Arctic

Karol Faehnrich, Jarosław Majka, David Schneider, Stanisław Mazur, Maciej Manecki, Grzegorz Ziemniak, Virginia T. Wala, Justin V. Strauss

2020Terra Nova39 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The timing of Svalbard's assembly in relation to the mid‐Paleozoic Caledonian collision between Baltica and Laurentia remains contentious. The Svalbard archipelago consists of three basement provinces bounded by N–S‐trending strike–slip faults whose displacement histories are poorly understood. Here, we report microstructural and mineral chemistry data integrated with 40 Ar/ 39 Ar muscovite geochronology from the sinistral Vimsodden‐Kosibapasset Shear Zone (VKSZ, southwest Svalbard) and explore its relationship to adjacent structures and regional deformation within the circum‐Arctic. Our results indicate that strike–slip displacement along the VKSZ occurred in late Silurian–Early Devonian and was contemporaneous with the beginning of the main phase of continental collision in Greenland and Scandinavia and the onset of syn‐orogenic sedimentation in Silurian–Devonian fault‐controlled basins in northern Svalbard. These new‐age constraints highlight possible links between escape tectonics in the Caledonian orogen and mid‐Paleozoic terrane transfer across the northern margin of Laurentia.

Topics & Concepts

LaurentiaGeologyBalticaDevonianPaleontologyPaleozoicTerraneArcticSinistral and dextralTectonicsOrdovicianOceanographyGeological and Geochemical AnalysisGeological Studies and ExplorationHydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
Geochronological constraints on Caledonian strike–slip displacement in Svalbard, with implications for the evolution of the Arctic | Litcius