Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4696057 | Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2012 | 15 Pages |
In the Embla oil field on the northern flank of the Mid North Sea High, the central North Sea, multiple quartz porphyric volcanic beds at ca. 4600 m depth form part of a volcano-sedimentary interval above the Caledonian basement as interpreted from seismic data. Zircon U–Pb laser ablation ICPMS date one bed to 374 ± 3 Ma, indicating that the volcanic rocks and interbedded sediments are early Famennian and correlate to the Buchan Formation. The volcanic rocks have been extensively clay and carbonate altered in a near-surface environment, but high field strength element data show that the protoliths were alkali rhyolites, yielding intra-plate signatures in tectonic discrimination diagrams. Famennian quartz porphyric volcanic rocks have also been reported from well A17-1 on the southern flank of the Mid North Sea High. The Famennian volcanism on the northern and southern flanks testify to an active magmatic environment in the central North Sea in the early Famennian, supporting the existence of a late Devonian proto-Central Graben rift extending northwards into the central North Sea. The rift is likely an early example of strain localisation to a zone of reduced crustal strength along the Caledonian suture between Avalonia and Baltica.
► Altered alkali rhyolites on the Mid North Sea High are dated to 374 ± 3 Ma. ► The protoliths of the altered rocks are only identifiable using HFSE elements. ► The volcanism is interpreted to reflect a late Devonian proto-Central Graben rift. ► The rift indicates strain localisation to the weak Avalonia – Baltica suture zone.