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Original Article |
1 1Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Allégt. 41, 5007 Bergen (e-mail: haakon.fossen@geo.uib.no)
2 2Department of Earth Sciences, Memorial University, St. John's, Newfoundland A1B 3X5, Canada
The Hardangerfjord Shear Zone is a more than 600 km long low-angle extensional structure that affects the South Norway and North Sea Caledonides. The ductile shear zone, which shows total maximum onshore displacement of the order of 1015 km, is primarily a basement structure with an associated passive, monoclinal fold structure of the overlying Caledonian nappes. Deep seismic data indicate that the shear zone continues down to the lower crust (2025 km) at a dip of 2223°, where it appears to flatten and merge with the general lower-crustal deformation fabric. Onshore, the Hardangerfjord Shear Zone consists of a system of hard-linked ductile shear-zone segments. Brittle faults (the L
rdalGjende fault system) occur in the folded Caledonian allochthons in the NE part of the Hardangerfjord Shear Zone, and reappear in the North Sea. These may represent a high-level brittle response to the Devonian development of the Hardangerfjord Shear Zone, but were reactivated during Permo-Triassic and late Jurassic extensional events. A c. 5 km thick package of seismic reflectors along the Hardangerfjord Shear Zone is presumed to represent a mylonite zone, which is too thick to be formed entirely by 1015 km of Devonian displacement. Hence the Hardangerfjord Shear Zone is likely to be a Proterozoic shear zone, reactivated during Devonian extension.
Key Words: Caledonides Hardangerfjord Shear Zone deep seismic sections extension reactivation