Tectonophysics, 173 (1990) 567-580 Elsevier Science Publishers
567
B.V., Amsterdam
- Printed
Fault reactivation
BEATRICE
in The Netherlands
during Mesozoic extension offshore Canada
de VOOGD
*, CHARLOTTE
E. KEEN
in eastern
and WILLIAM
A. KAJ’
Geological Survey of Canada, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, B2Y 4A2 (Canada,1 (Received
September
1,1988;
accepted
March 6.1989)
Abstract De Voogd,
B., Keen,
Canada.
C.E. and Kay,
Continents
profiles
now straddle
that document
the Hibemia
each other near the western
picture
of basement
appears
to follow a pre-existing
Hibernia
structures.
1990. Fault C. Wright,
reactivation J.C. Dooley
reactivation
basin
characterized
by numerous,
This detailed been formed Mesozoic
occupies
The basin-bounding
fault
which
fault system. More precisely,
Grand
dipping
the reactivated
extensional
the central
most of the Bonavista reflective
study of the Hibernia
within
region suggests
hanging
marks
the eastern
of
that the narrow
elongated
sheets. Similar
shelf. The pre-Mesozoic Orogen
The Late Palaeozoic history of the eastern Canadian continental margin is poorly known by comparison with the European conjugate. Palaeozoic or older structures are however likely to be present and may have played a role in the formation of the rifted Mesozoic basins that now occupy this passive margin. This paper presents new deep multichannel seismic reflection data where
de GCologie,
The profiles
edge of the Bonavista
the Bonavista part
Canada.
giving a three-dimensional
the Jeanne
a Palaeozoic
thrust
platform
d’Arc Basin just ncrth platform,
of
where it his not
fault. A laterally
of the crust
extensive
is quite reflective
Ecole Normale
75231 Paris, Cedex 05, France.
0 1990 Elsevier Science Publishers
B.V
basins of the Grand observations
compressional
and may be of Variscan
structures
0040-1951/90/$03.50
offshore
Seismic Probing
fault. Four deep s:ismic
off eastern
d’Arc Basin, thereby
The deeper
walls of older thrust
basins of the U.K. continental
DCpartement
in eastern
(Editors),
.md is
packages.
Banks lie along the Appalachian
24 rue Lhomond,
extension
Kennett
Banks
the fault that bounds
was probably
platform.
Introduction
address:
Mesozoic
fault as a normal
of the Grand
edge of the 22 km deep Jeanne
The seismic data show that this feature
Palaeozoic(?)
SupCrieure,
of a thrust
oil field region
can be traced on the seismic data along strike to the south, beneath
been reactivated.
* Present
during
and B.L.N.
Tectonophysics, 173: 567-580.
and their Margins.
New seismic data are presented reflection intersect
W.A..
In: J.H. Leven. D.M. Finlayson,
Banks may have
have been made for the structures
documemed
on
age.
which pre-date
the Mesozoic
extension
are imaged. The seismic data reported here were recorded in 1987 in the Hibernia region of the Grand Banks off eastern Canada (lines 87-1 and 87-2, Figs. 1 and 2) and complement the data collected in 1985 (de Voogd and Keen, 1987). The Mesozoic basins and the deep structure of the continental margin were the main focus of these two surveys that straddled the region between the Bonavista platform to the west, and the rifted continental margin to the east. Results concerning the continentocean transition are presented by Keen and de Voogd (1988). The 1985 profiles revealed crustal-scale structures associated with the Meso-
I
60°
44OW
52O
-P-p\'-p---
-i
1,52O N /, \84-2
1,O!
! 48O
85-l
IU \
\85-4
i’
-440
'85-2
I
52O
I
440
Fig. 1. Location of deep multichannel seismic reflection profiles (bold lines) on the eastern Canadian margin. Major sedimentary basins are stippled; box indicates area of Fig. 2.
zoic basins (Keen et al., 1987). The basins are bounded by large, moderately dipping normal faults that terminate in the lower crust or at Moho depth. Besides theses normal faults, several intra-basement dipping reflectors were imaged and one goal of the 1987 survey was to constrain their origin. Tectonic framework The area of study (Figs. 1 and 2) lies along the Caledonian/Appalachian erogenic zone. Basement beneath the central Grand Banks consists of rocks of the Avalon terrane of the Appalachian orogen (Haworth and Lefort, 1979; Willlams and Hatcher, 1983). This pre-Mesozoic basement includes Hadrynian and possibly older crystalline rocks, and may be overlain by Palaeozoic sedimentary or metasedimentary sequences similar to those described by Durling et al. (1987). As rifting of the North Atlantic progressed northward, several episodes of extension of dif-
fering orientations dissected the preYMesozoic basement. The Grand Banks first experienced extensional tectonics in Triassic time, followed by rifting in Jurassic and Early Cretaceous time (Enachescu, 1987; Tankard and Welsink, 1987). The end of Mesozoic rifting is recorded by the-prominent Late Cretaceous “breakup unconformity”, or series of unconformities, collectively termed the Avalon Unconformity (Jansa and Wade, 1975). The Jeanne d’Arc Basin (Fig. 2) is one of the major Mesozoic rift basins. It lies on the northern Grand Banks, at the point where the direction of extension changed through time from east-west to northeast-southwest. The basin is exceptionally deep, over 22 km, and is bounded on the west by the Bona&a platform. Industry seismic data have delineated the shape of the basin-bounding fault system, the Murre-Mercury faults. The Mercury sub-basin is of Cretaceous age, whereas a thick section of Jurassic and older deposits has been documented in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin (Enachescu, 1987). The jagged e&e of the Bonavista platform in the Hibemia region may result from
FAULT
RELAC-I’IVATION
DURING
MESOZOK
Fig. 2. Model of depth to basement location software)
of deep multichannel
EXTENSION,
showing
major deep structures
seismic reflection
of the deep seismic profiles features
E. OFFSHORE
profiles.
and selected
near the edge of the Bonavista
It is constrained
released
569
CANADA
industry
by three-dimensional
lines. Note
are not shown here. Dot is location
that secondary
of the Hibemia
platform ray-tracing faults
an discussed (Sierra
in text, with
Gesphysics
as well as many
Inc.
small-scale
oil field.
transfer faulting oblique to the normal faults that bound the basin (Tankard and Welsink, 1989).
summarized by Keen et al. (1990). Processing included pre-stack deconvolution and FK filtering, and post-stack migration. The seismic: sections
Seismic reflection data
and line drawings shown here (Figs. 3-:3) have no vertical exaggeration for a velocity of 5 km s-l. We shall first describe lines 87-1 and 87-2, and discuss their ties with lines 85-3 and 85-4 (Fig. 2). These ties provide key evidence needed to fuel our discussion on reactivation of pre-existing structures.
The 1987 data were recorded by Geophysical Services Inc. (GSI), Calgary, Alberta, and processed under contract by Western Geophysical. Acquisition and processing parameters are similar to the 1985 survey (Kay and Keen, 1988) and
H I)l.
0
\‘OotiO
I I .x1
FAULT
REAC’I’IVATION
DURING
MESOZOIC
EXTENSION.
E. OFFSHORF
CAYADA
B r>E VOOCiI>
BONAVISTA
(a)
ET AI.
PLATFORM
15
20 KM
line 87-1 (migrated)
f&l
BONAVISTA
JEANNE
PLATFQFtM
15
D’ARC 6ASlN
- ‘-
_--
20 KM
15
Fig. 4. Line-drawing interpretation of migrated stacks of the new seismic profiles presented here (lines 87-1 and 87-22 Se&ted examples of the actual data are shown in Figs. 3,5-8. Triangles indicate ties with released industry seismic lines used to constrain the interpretation; ties between the deep profiles are also shown. (a) Line 87-l; dashed tine at about 3 s is drawn immediately below the prominent seismic marker labeled B in Figs. 6,7, and 8. (b) Line 87-2, &owing the western edge of the Jeanne d’Arc Baain north of the Hibernia oil field. K indicates the Cretaceous section that fills the Mmzzry sub-basin; J indicates the thick Jurassic pile present in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin.
Line 87-l is confined to the Bonavista platform, where the post-rift sediments were initially thought to lie directly on top of basement. Line 87-2 starts on the platform, runs eastward across the Mercury sub-basin (Enachescu, 1987) and crosses line 85-3 in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin (Fig. 2). Post-rift sediments overlie the Avalon unconformity, a prominent seismic marker labelled A in Figs. 4, 5 and 7. It separates Upper Cretaceous sediments from underlying Jurassic/Triassic deposits or basement (Enachescu, 1987). The uppermost prominent reflector is the “base- Tertiary” un~nfor~ty (labeled T), which is readily distinguished from the Avalon unconformity in the Jeanne d’Arc Basin (eastern half 87-2, Figs. 4b and 7). These two unconformities coalesce on the
flanks of the basin. Below the Avalon unconformity, the basin-fill consists of a thick, faulted, syn-rift section of Triassic to Lower Cretaceous deposits. Sedimentary structures within the Jertnrze d’Arc Basin itself will not be further discussed here (see Enachescu, 1987; Keen et al., 1987; Tankard and Welsink, 1987). The Murre-Mercury fault system that bounds the western side of the Jeanne d’Arc Basin (Fig. 2) is clearly imaged on line 87-2 (Figs. 4b and 7). Inferred fault plane reflections can be wed to at least 10 s (or about 25 km depth) on the seismic section. These faults are the focus of this paper, and their geometry and origin are discussed in the next section. Prominent reflective packages are observed in
FAULT
REACTIVATION
DURING
MESOZOIC
EXTENSION.
E. OFFSHORE
the deeper part of the crust on lines 87-1 and 87-2 (Figs.
7 and
different
8). Distinct
orientations
reflective
are imaged
“layered”
lower crust (McGeary,
flections
occur
throughout
bands,
and intersect the Bonavista
Moho is well defined lower crustal
rather
than
than
Individual
a
evenly
events
released
38 km) and appears
zontal.
data
sub-hori-
85-4 give
a
basement velocity of 6.1 km s-i and confirm that Moho coincides with the base of the reflective lower crustal unit (Reid and Keen, 1988; I. Reid, 1988). Moho is poorly imaged pers. commun.,
lines, the west
d’Arc Basin (Enachescu. a deeper
to the Murre
1987;
reflection
unknown
fault image.
origin
The loca-
to tie with reflection
H on line 85-3. The intersecting displayed
industry
fault bounding
tion of line 87-2 was chosen
unit (Figs. 4, 5. 7 and 8). It is fairly line
with
the Murre
Keen et al., 1987). In addition, runs parallel
by the base of the reflective
along
85-3, along imaged
(H, Figs. 3a and 5) of previously
the reflection
deep (13 s or about Refraction
Line clearly
side of the Jeanne
are
each other. platform
Deep fault geometry and basement structures
of
1987). These re-
rather
the lower crust.
often dipping Beneath
in
packages
573
CANADA
in Fig. 3 demonstrate
seismic that
sections
13 ties with
the Mercury fault to the north. Assuming a locally planar reflector, and taking an average basement velocity of 6.1 km s-l, it can be calculated that reflector H strikes the east.
NlO”E
and dips about
30” to
beneath the Jeanne d’Arc Basin. On line 87-2, Moho may correspond to a weak, “pulled-down”
To further constrain deep reflector geometry in the absence of crustal-scale three-dimensional pro-
arrival
filing and depth migration, forward modelling techniques were applied. Three-dimensional mod-
at about
14 s (Figs.
4b and
suggesting a flat Moho beneath of the basin.
7), thereby
the western
edge
els of major geological
BONAVISTA
markers
(base Tertiary,
top
PLATFORM MURRE FAULT
87-l
line 85-3 (migrated) Fig. 5. Migrated vertical reflective
dashed
stack of line 85-3, showing line indicates
packages
underneath
the location the Bonavista
the western
edge of the Jeanne
of a small jog in the trend platform
are interpreted
d’Arc
Basin in the vicinity
of line 85-3 (located as thrust
in Figs. 6, 7, and 8.
faults.
of the Hibernia
in Fig. 2). Highlighted.
Reflections
between
oil field. A
easterly
dipping
1.5 and 3 s are better seen
574
Jurassic, top basement, intra-basement reflectors to be studied) were created, and synthetic seismic sections
generated
for comparison
Three-dimensional Sierra
ray-tracing
Geophysics
Inc.
was performed
modelling
industry
with the data.
blicly
available
lines
strain
the interpretation
crust.
Fig. 2 shows the depth
with
software.
were used
in the shallow
Pu-
to con-
part of the
to basement
model
tions that terminate within basement, beneath the Avalon unconformity. At depth, they appear to merge with the uppermost reflectors of the lower crust, at about below,
these
represent
pre-rift
In summary, platform whose
that the dipping
formation
be a primary
event
coming
pping planar horizon trace of the Mercury
H (Figs. 3 and 5) must from
which projects fault (Fig. 2).
an easterly
di-
to the surface
One of the most prominent features mapped in this area is a basement ridge trending north-northeast away from the Bonavista platform and plunging under the basin (Fig. 2). It is imaged on line 87-2 (Figs. 4b and 7) as well as on industry lines (Enachescu, 1987). This ridge is narrow and flanked on either side by deep troughs filled with Mesozoic sediments. Its general attitude is well constrained by the seismic data except across its northeastern edge, where coverage is sparse. On line 85-3 (Fig. 5), H appears as one of a series
of easterly
dipping
intra-basement
reflec-
thrust
pfigin,
packages
As discussed
are inferred
edge of the Bonavista
to a complex
fault
system,
as is shown
below,
predates
of the Mesozoic
Jeanne
d’Arc
The basement
to
slices.
the jagged
corresponds
which best fit the data used. This study confirmed reflection
8 s (or 22 km depth). reflective
ridge that separates
the Basin.
the Cretaceous
Mercury sub-basin from the Jeanne d’Arc Basin proper trends about 20” away from the Murre fault. A Palaeozoic(?)
basin on the Bonavista platform
Basin-like features are clearly imaged on the Bonavista platform, well beneath the base-Tertiary unconformity which was previously thought to rest on Precambrian Avalon Terrane rocks. A prominent reflector (B, Figs. 4, 6, 7 and 8) is observed about 1.5 s beneath the breakup unconformity. In places, it is difficult to distinguish from multiples,
but its existence
is unequivocal
on
n7
Fig. 6. Close-up view of the top left portion of seismic section in Fig. 5. Note the folded appearance of horizon B at the intersection of the profile with line 87-l.
10
Fig. 7. Migrated
15
1
5
BJ
Moho
S E c 0 N D S
T1
0
stack of line 87-2 showing
the western
87-1 (Fig. 8).
d’Arc Basin, in the vicinity
M_ercp-y \\I Fault
edge of the Jeanne
line 87-2 (migrated)
Bonavista Platform
of the Mercury
\\r
Cretaceous
Murre c- I. t-ault
sub-basin.
Note reflector
10km B, better
imaged
0x1 line
15
10
5
‘A
IT
0
Jeanne d’Arc Basin
wl
Y
Bonavista Platform
S E
c 0 N D S
Moho 15 line 87-l (migrated) Fig. 8. Migrated
stack of northern
areas of the Bonavista
platform
half of line 87-l. and discussed
IOkm
northern half
7’ is base Tertiary;
in text. Note dipping
B is the prominent
and subhorizontal
event observed
reflective
packages
at about
I 3 s over iarge
in the middle
and lower
crust.
line 87-1 (Fig. 8). It is a prominent seismic marker, that can be traced for large distances on the Bonavista platform. It appears subhorizontal on line 87-1, as well as on industry lines that run roughly parallel to the edge of the platform. On east-west trending profiles, such as line 85-3, B is locally deformed in broad antiforms (Fig. 6). At the intersection of line 87-l and 85-3 (Figs. 5 and 6), there is little doubt that B caps the east-dipping reflections that border the Murre fault to the west. The section between B and the base Tertiary event T is poorly imaged. Inspection -of released industry seismic lines indicates a highly deformed and poorly reflective sequence. There is some sparse and often unclear evidence that this sequence has been compressively deformed (Fig. 6). Nowhere could tilted blocks or extensional features be documented. This sequence appears to be evidence of a wide, relatively shallow sedimentary
basin covering at least part of the Bonavista platform. Evidence for the existence of a sedimentary basin on the eastern half of the Bonavista platform was published by Reid and Keen (1988) on the basis of seismic refraction experiments. Enachescu (1987) describes the area to the north as underlain by Palaeozoic metasediments, and Enachescu (1989) discusses thrust faults and folding of these Palaeozoic and underlying Precambrian rocks from industry seismic lines. No deep well has been drilled on the platform, though Palaeozoic m&sediments were encountered in a small rotated basement block about 150 km northwest of the area of study (Enachescu, 1989). Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks, often folded and deformed, have been mapped in the western half of the platform (Durling et al., 1987). These observations, together with the broad gravity low that occupies this area of the Bonavista platform (En-
FAULT
K!3ACTIVATION
DURING
achescu,
1987), provide
existence
of a basin.
MESOZOIC
further
EXTENSION,
E. OFFSHORE
evidence
for the
CANADA
577
Mesozoic
reactivation.
phy of the Jeanne the Mercury
Reactivation of pre-existing structures Reactivation structures explain
crustal
sional
basins
often difficult gle normal deep
of
pre-existing
as normal
faults
features
associated
(e.g. Hillis
and
to document.
Day,
reflection
profiles
exten-
tion of Palaeozoic
1987),
but is
normal
interest
because
worldwide
models
and Boutilier,
of extensional
have
faulting
north
of the basement
with
provided direct evidence that the upper crust has been extended along low to moderate-angle normal faults (e.g. Allmendinger et al., 1983). It is also a critical issue in current attempts to develop numerical
further
On the European
to
The origin of low-an-
faults is of particular
seismic
invoked
not include
and the Murre
fault may
as suggested ridge
mapped
(Bassi
1988).
conjugate and older
margin, thrusts
faults has been proposed
the formation on BIRPS,
of several
ECORS
to accommodate
Mesozoic
basins
and other profiles
No
such
interpretations
have
been
documented
prior to this study concerning the G-and Banks basins, though several authors have suggested that
Mercury Cretaceous normal fault (Fig. 2) ties to the south of the Mercury sub-basin with an intra-
Tankard
1989). Because
Fig.
5) along
which
no
displacement of Mesozoic age is observed beneath the Bonavista platform. Furthermore, this reflector H, as well as weaker events beneath the platform, are associated with a Palaeozoic(?) sequence that has apparently been compressively deformed (B, Fig. 6). Therefore, we suggest these easterly dipping faults,
reflectors
are Palaeozoic
which have undergone
or older
various
of
and
Welsink,
had been in(Keen, 1989; the direc-
tions of the Mesozoic extensional episodes are unlikely to be pe~endicular to the strike of the pre-existing structures, complex motion and oblique dip-slip movement will result, giving rise to variations
in structural
style within
the region.
The European connection Middle
thrust
amounts
et
al., 1983: Brewer and Smythe, 1984; BIRPS and ECORS, 1986; Cheadle et al., 1987; Stein, 1988), though some of these interpretations have been disputed (e.g. Pinet et al., 1987; Wernicke, 1986).
evolution structures
(H,
imaged
(Brewer
basin formation and fluenced by inherited
reflector
reactiva-
as low-angle
The data presented in this paper document reactivation of a pre-existing fault system. The
basement
by the in this
study (Fig. 2).
compressional
is often
palaeogeogra-
d’Arc Basin would
sub-basin,
have extended presence
The Jurassic
Europe
to Late Palaeozoic and
eastern
/
North
orogenies
of western
America
have
been
IBERIA /
Fig. 9. Reconstruction indicates
of the North
zone of Appalachian 1988); prominent
Atlantic
deformation;
magnetic
at anomaly dashed
MO time, taken from Srivastava
heavy lines are Variscan
ridges on the Grand
Banks are stippled;
trends
et al. (1988). Hatched
(Lefort
FC is Flemish
and Haworth,
pattern
approximately
1984; Hutchinson
Cap; box is area of study (Fig. 2).
et al.,
57X
correlated on the basis of geophysical data (Lefort. 1983; Lefort and Haworth, 1984). The deep seismic
the two segments of the basin bounding fault system (Murre and Mercury faults) are different.
profiles
This geometry
Gulf
presented of Maine
Orpheus
here, along with profiles (Hutchinson
Graben
(Marillier
recent
profile
(Keen
et al., 1990),
Late
across
Palaeozoic
Mesozoic
passive
The Variscan
et al.,
provide
structures margin
1988).
et al., 1989)
the southern
Grand
the first
and
a
Banks
images
in the vicinity
of
of the
front is relatively as the northern
well defined
a 700-800 Carboniferous
km wide zone affected tectonics. The Variscan
boundary
in
by Late belt of
by thrust and nappe
struc-
Variscan tectonics in western Europe, but little is known about its extent in North America, and a of models
have been
proposed
(Arthaud
and Matte, 1977; Gardiner and Sheridan, 1981; Haworth and Jacobi, 1983). Seismic profiling on the western European continental shelf imaged Palaeozoic or older faults and suggest that these are Variscan thrust faults reactivated during Mesozoic crustal extension (Cheadle et al., 1987; Hillis and Day, 1987). The inferred thrust system imaged near the edge of the Bonavista platform may also be a Variscan feature, related to those on the European
has enabled
grid of deep seismic which
us to map the pertinent
in three dimensions,
clearly
using the excellent
and industrial
shows
“dormant”
portions
favourable
geometries
both
the
seismic
lines,
reactivated
of the Mercury near major
and
fault.
Other
basin-bounding
to extend
our investigations
to other areas.
of
tures and wrench-fault tectonics dated essentially between 380 and 280 Ma ago (Matte, 1986; Matte and Him, 1988). Much has been published about
variety
reflectors
faults must surely exist and it would be instructive
Europe
is characterized
the
(Fig. 9).
northwestern
Europe
in the
margin.
Conclusions
Acknowledgements We thank S. Srivastava and J. Verhoef for the use of one of their figures and A. Edwards for discussions. G. Stockmal, M. Keen, G. Bassi, S.L. Klemperer and an anonymous reviewer made useful comments on earlier versions of the manuscript. Synthetic seismic modelling of basement features was performed
Basin bounding fault of Mesozoic age, the Murre-Mercury fault system, reactivates crustalscale, easterly-dipping thrusts. A laterally extensive Palaeozoic(?) basin occupies most of the Bonavista platform. While reactivation of thrust faults to produce extensional faults has often been suggested as a controlling factor in the development of extensional basins on the continental margins of western Europe and eastern North America, there are few instances where reactivation can be doeumented. In the Jeanne d’Arc region the trend of
of Geonova
Enter-
logical Survey of Canada. B. de V. was funded by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council
(NSERC)
post-doctoral
ship. Geological No. 47688.
Survey
Visiting
of Canada
Fellow-
Contribution
References Allmendinger, R.W., Sharp, J.W., Von Tish. D., Set-pa, L., Kaufman,
Basement reflectors were mapped at the edge of the Bonavista platform, near the Jeanne d’Arc Basin on the Grand Banks. The Jeanne d’Arc
by K. Dickie
prises. The deep seismic reflection profiles are part of the Frontier Geoscience Program of the Geo-
and
S., Oliver,
Mesozoic
province,
Utah,
Geology, Arthaud,
F. and
COCORP
1983. Cenozoic
Basin
seismic
Matte,
P., 1977.
Late
and
Range
reflection
data.
Paleozoic
Europe. and northern
shear zone between Boutilier,
during
dynamical
Africa:
strike-slip result of a
the Appalachians
Abstr.,
R., 1988.
continental model.
Movement
and the
along
: Pr&minary
rifting
Am.
Geophys.
Union,
normal
results Spring
of a Meet.,
p. 465.
Brewer, J.A. and Smythe, ity of crustal palachian
reflector
orogen.
and
reflection 206-210.
Shittington, studies
D.K., 1984. MOIST geometry
D.H., Warner, R.J.,
of the British
and the continu-
along the Caledonian-Ap-
J. Geol. Sot. London,
Brewer, J.A., Matthews, D.K.
R.B.,
Geol. Sot. Am. Bull., 88: 1305-1320.
G. and
faults
from
in southern
right-lateral Bassi,
Smith,
of the eastern
11: 532-536.
faulting Urals.
J. and
structure
1983.
141: 105-120.
M.R., Half, J., Smythe, BURPS deep
Caledonides.
seismic
Nature,
305:
FAULT
REACTIVATION
BIRPS
and
DURING
ECORS,
MESOZOIC
1986. Deep
between England,
France
EXTENSION.
seismic
and Ireland.
E. OFFSHORE
reflection
profiling
J. Geol. Sot. London,
143: 45-52. Cheadle,
McGeary,
1987.
continental
S., Warner,
Extensional
M.R.
structures
on
the
shelf: a review of evidence
profiling
In: M. Coward,
(Editors),
Continental
London,
and
J.F. Dewey
Extensional
Matthews,
western
UK
B. and
Keen.
C.E.,
Tectonics.
Geol.
Sot.
of the continental
Grand
Banks
Geophys.
J. R. Astron. G.B.J.,
and distribution
Platform,
Sot.,
89:
offshore
1987. The geologi-
of Paleozoic
rocks
Newfoundland.
on the
Can.
J. Earth
Sci., 24: 7412-1420. Enachescu,
of the Northeast Beaumont
and structural
Newfoundland
and A.J. Tankard
Basin-Forming
continental (Editors),
Mechanisms.
framework
margin.
In: C.
Sedimentary
Can.
Sot.
Pet.
M.E.,
tracratonic
basement
rifted basins of the Grand
P.R.R.
Geophys.,
and Sheridan,
of the Celtic
reference
beneath
the in-
1981. Tectonic
adjacent
areas
of the Variscan
zonation
frame-
with
Front.
special
J. Struct. correlation
of Newfoundland
and the
R.T. and Lefort, J.P., 1979. Geophysical zone in Atlantic
evidence
Canada.
for
Can. J.
Willis, P.R. and Day. G.A.. 1987. Deep events in U.K. SouthApproaches.
Geophys.
J.
R. As&on. SOC., 89:
243-250. Hutchinson.
D.R..
Klitgord,
W.A. and Keen,
seismic
reflection
Canadian
continental
of the continental
Newfoundland.
Geol.
margin:
SUN.
from
margin.
the Grand
multichannel
Banks,
Eastern
Geol. Surv. Can., Open
File
from crustal
styles of lithospheric studies
Canada.
In:
Geodyn.
Ser., 20 (in press). and
Sedimentary de Voogd,
at the rifted
across
Basins.
Am.
extension
rift basins,
eastern
Geophys.
Union.
F. Keen.
B., 1988.
C.E.,
structure
and
lachians:
implications
Canada:
new
to correlate
the
Europe
and
Spec. Publ..
conse-
North
Atlantic
14: !19-232.
G.S..
Quinlan.
S. and O’Brien. zonation
for con-
paleogeographic of the
Stockmal.
surface
evidence
G.. Wil-
S.J., 1989. Crustal
of the Caradian
of deep seismic reflection
Appa-
data. Can.
J. Earth Sci. (in press). Matte,
P., 1986. Tectonics
Matte,
P. and
Him.
cross-section McGeary.
plate
tectonics
Tectonophysics.
A., 1988. Seismic
of the
Variscan
model
signature
crust
for the
126 3299374. and tectonic
in We!.tern
France.
7: 141-155.
S.. 1987. Non-typical
northern Pinet,
and
belt of Europe.
North
BIRPS
Sea: The SHET
on the margin
Survey.
of the
Gcophys.
J. R.
Sot., 89: 231-238.
B., Montadert.
L., IMascle, A.. Cares,
M. and Bois, C..
1987. New insights
on the structure
sedimentary
from deep seismic profiling
basins
and the formation
In: J. Brooks and K. Glennie West
from seismic refraction ern Canada.
Europe.
a detailed foundland
experiments:
(Editor<),
Graham crustal
Petroleum
and
Trotman.
stru:ture
Grand
of
in Western
derived
B,mks of East-
Bull. Can. Pet. Geol.. 36: 388-396.
S., Verhoef,
J. and Macnab,
aeromagnetic margin.
survey
Parts
I and
from
R., 1988. Results
across
the northeast
II. Mar.
Pet.
New-
Geol.,
5:
306-337. in the Caledonian
controls
foretand,
upon basin development
NW Scotland.
B.isin Res.. I:
107-119. Tankard.
A.J. and Welsink.
foundland.
The continent-ocean
off eastern
their
on the Canadian
and
Tectonics
iiams, If., Colman-Sadd,
and stratigraphy
margin
Ken-
(this volume).
of wester?
front
geodynamic
Variscan
Geol. Sot. London,
Marillier.
Leven.
and
R.T., 1984. Geophysical
of the Variscan
In:
anat-
J.H.
and B.L.N.
criterion
orogenies
Stein. A.M., 1988. Basement
determined
C.E.
the extension
Srivastava,
C.E., 1988. Deep marine data
Pet.
Geol. Sot. Am., Mem.. 158: 3-18.
Lefort, J.P. and Haworth,
pp. 11-31.
Rep.. 1731.
boundary
America.
Ir:
of Continents
173: 527-544
Hercynian
London,
and
Keen, C.E., 1989. Contrasting
Keen,
and
of North
J.A., 1975. Geology Scotia
In:
Sot.
1990. Crustal
J.C. Dooley
Reid. 1. and Keen, C.E., 1988. Upper
off Nova
data.
Sedimentary Can.
margin.
J.P.. 1983. A new geophysical
Acadian
Europe.
and
Can., Pap. 74-30, 2: 51-105. Kay,
Lefort,
W.R.,
Probing
Tectonophysics,
Geology
M.W.
172-l 84. margin
B. and
Banks off eastern
Mechanisms.
C. Wright.
Trehu,
Lee,
profile across the Gulf of Maine. Geol. Sot. Am. Bull., 100: L.F. and Wade,
7:
and models of the
(Editors),
continental
Seismic
Survey deep seismic reflection
K.D.,
A.M., 1988. U.S. Geological
Jansa.
Margins,
Astron.
Earth Sci.. 16: 552-567. western
Tankard
W.A. and Roest.
(Editors).
Tectonics,
British Isles. Geol. Sot. Am., Mem., 158: 25-32. the extent of the Avalon
B.. Mudford,
geometry
on the Grand
Basin-Forming
D.M. Finlayson,
tinental
Banks of Newfound-
R.D., 1983. Geophysical
the geological
A.J.
of a transform
Variscan
R.T. and Jacobi,
between Haworth.
omy
quences
Bull. (in press).
D.J.R.,
Sea and
to the location
Tectonics.
from deep seismic reflection
and
and
Geol.,
Geol., 3: 317-331. Haworth,
of the rift basins
Region.
1989. Extended
land. Can. Sot. Explor. work
Basins
Basins
Mem., 12: 117-146. Enachescu,
1987. Crustal
constraints
eastern
M.E., 1987. The tectonic
Gardiner,
evolution
nett
Avalon
studies.
R., de Voogd,
ME.,
Keen. C.E., Kay,
margin;
195-200. cal structure
reflection
Geol.. Mem., 12: X01-115.
1987. LITHOPROBE-EAST:
P.W., Bell, J.S. and Fader,
Boutiher,
C. Beaumont
P.L. Hancock
profiling
and
C.E.,
Enachescu,
and
from reflection
Durling,
deep seismic
Canada:
Results
region.
from
107-124.
from deep seismic
Spec. Pub{.. 28: 445-465.
de Voogd.
579
results Keen,
M.J.,
D.H..
CANADA
Tankard,
H.J.,
of Hibernia
Am. Assoc.
A.J. and Welsink.
1987. Extensional oil field, Grand
Pet. Geol..
tectonics
Banks. New-
Bull., 71: 1110-1232.
H.J.. 1989. Extensional
tectonics.
5x0
structural
styles and stratigraphy
Banks of Newfoundland. assic-Jurassic Ocean. Wernicke,
Rifting
and
the Opening
Grand
(Editor). of the
Tri-
Atlantic
B., 1986. Whole-lithosphere of deep reflection
In: M. Barazangi
normal profiles
and L.D. Brown
of the Continental
Seismology.
Crust:
simple shear: an in Great
(Editors),
Results
from
Britain.
Deep StrucReflection
Am.
Geophys.
Union,
Geodyn.
Ser.,
14:
331-339. Williams, pect
Elsevier, Amsterdam.
interpretation ture
of the Mesozoic
In: W. Manspeizer
H. and Hatcher, terranes.
Zietz (Editors), physics 33-53.
In: R.D.
Jr., R.D..
19X3. Appalachian
Hatcher,
Jr., H. Williams
Contributions
of Mountain
Chains.
to the Tectonics
susand
1.
and Geo-
Geol. Sot. Am.. Mem.,
159: