Lyell Collection

Journal of the Geological Society

Lyell Centre  |   Lyell Collection  |   Subscriptions   |   Geological Society  |   Email alerts  |   Online bookshop  |   Help


Keywords:
Author:
Advanced search>>
This Article
Right arrow Figures Only
Right arrow Full Text
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Right arrow Citation Map
Services
Right arrow Email this article to a friend
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrow Request Permissions
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via HighWire
Right arrow Citing Articles via Web of Science (10)
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by Osmundsen, P.T.
Right arrow Articles by Eide, E.
Right arrow Search for Related Content
GeoRef
Right arrow GeoRef Citation
Journal of the Geological Society; 2003; v. 160; issue.1; p. 137-150;
DOI: 10.1144/0016-764901-173
© 2003 Geological Society of London

Original Article

The Devonian Nesna shear zone and adjacent gneiss-cored culminations, North–Central Norwegian Caledonides

P.T. Osmundsen, A. Braathen, Ø. Nordgulen, D. Roberts, G.B. Meyer & E. Eide

Geological Survey of Norway, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway (e-mail: per.osmundsen@ngu.no)

The Early to Mid-Devonian strain distribution in the Norwegian Caledonides was characterized by large-magnitude extension, extension-normal shortening and sinistral strike-slip. In SW Norway, previous work has shown that the angle between the orogen and the Devonian maximum elongation trend decreases northward towards a zone of sinistral strike-slip. We provide evidence that: (1) late- to post-orogenic extension was much more important in North–Central Norway than recognized previously; (2) the Early to Mid-Devonian, roughly orogen-parallel, maximum elongation trend persisted over more than 200 km farther north than hitherto recognized; (3) a number of gneiss-cored culminations in North–Central Norway were affected by, and probably owe their present geometry to, extensional shearing and faulting. The Nesna shear zone is identified here as a major, late Early to Mid-Devonian, low-angle extensional shear zone in the North–Central Norwegian Caledonides. In the study area, the Nesna shear zone now constitutes the lower boundary of the Helgeland Nappe Complex, a terrane exotic to Baltica. The present situation of the Helgeland Nappe Complex is thus that of an extensional allochthon. The transport direction along the medium- to low-grade Nesna shear zone was top-to-the-WSW, and thus roughly orogen-parallel. Extensional shearing in the Nesna shear zone may provide an explanation for a westward-younging, 40Ar/39Ar cooling pattern previously reported from the Ofoten–Lofoten area. Folding of the Nesna shear zone along axes parallel to the extensional transport direction indicates that extension-normal shortening continued at least into late Early and Mid-Devonian times. The WSW–ENE maximum elongation trend probably persisted in North–Central Norway through most of the Devonian period, and accompanied the transition from ductile to brittle deformation in the rocks of the Caledonian nappe-stack. Deformation in low-angle, initially medium-grade, extensional shear zones such as the Nesna shear zone was succeeded by shearing in steeper, low-grade, ductile-to-brittle shear zones that developed along the western margins of gneiss-cored culminations. Temporal overlap between activity in the Nesna shear zone and in the lower-grade shear zones that bound the culminations can be demonstrated. To the east, however, medium-grade extensional shear zones such as the present boundary between the Seve and Köli nappes were probably back-rotated as the culminations developed in the footwall of the low-grade shear zones. From the Mid–Late Devonian to Early Carboniferous, the low-grade, culmination-bounding shear zones constituted the eastern margin of a regional, transtensional system bounded in the south by the sinistral Møre–Trøndelag Fault Complex.


Keywords: Devonian, Scandinavian Caledonides, North–Central Norway, extension, shear zones.




This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Geological Society of America MemoirsHome page
J. A. Gilotti and W. C. McClelland
Geometry, kinematics, and timing of extensional faulting in the Greenland Caledonides--A synthesis
Geological Society of America Memoirs, 2008; 202: 251 - 271.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
ajsHome page
C. L. Kirkland, J. S. Daly, E. A. Eide, and M. J. Whitehouse
Tectonic evolution of the Arctic Norwegian Caledonides from a texturally- and structurally-constrained multi-isotopic (Ar-Ar, Rb-Sr, Sm-Nd, U-Pb) study
Am J Sci, 2007; 307: 459 - 526.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Geological Society of America MemoirsHome page
D. Roberts, O. Nordgulen, and V. Melezhik
The Uppermost Allochthon in the Scandinavian Caledonides: From a Laurentian ancestry through Taconian orogeny to Scandian crustal growth on Baltica
Geological Society of America Memoirs, 2007; 200: 357 - 377.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
P.T. Osmundsen, E.A. Eide, N.E. Haabesland, D. Roberts, T.B. Andersen, M. Kendrick, B. Bingen, A. Braathen, and T.F. Redfield
Kinematics of the Hoybakken detachment zone and the More-Trondelag Fault Complex, central Norway
Journal of the Geological Society, 2006; 163: 303 - 318.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Geological MagazineHome page
M. A. Kendrick, M. A. KENDRICK, E. A. EIDE, D. ROBERTS, and P. T. OSMUNDSEN
The Middle to Late Devonian Hoybakken detachment, central Norway: 40Ar-39Ar evidence for prolonged late/post-Scandian extension and uplift
Geological Magazine, 2004; 141: 329 - 344.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


Home page
Journal of the Geological SocietyHome page
J. F. Dewey, J.F. Dewey, and R.A. Strachan
Changing Silurian-Devonian relative plate motion in the Caledonides: sinistral transpression to sinistral transtension
Journal of the Geological Society, 2003; 160: 219 - 229.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]