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Paleoceanography | 2003

The Greenland-Norwegian Seaway: a key area for understanding Late Jurassic to early Cretaceous paleoenvironments

Jörg Mutterlose; Hans J. Brumsack; Sascha Flögel; William W. Hay; Christian Klein; Uwe Langrock; Marcus Lipinski; Werner Ricken; Emanuel Söding; Rüdiger Stein; Oliver Swientek

The paleoclimatology and paleoceanology of the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous are of special interest because this was a time when large amounts of marine organic matter were deposited in sediments that have subsequently become petroleum source rocks. However, because of the lack of outcrops, most studies have concentrated on low latitudes, in particular the Tethys and the “Boreal Realm,” where information has been based largely on material from northwest Germany, the North Sea, and England. These areas were all south of 40°N latitude during the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous. We have studied sediment samples of Kimmeridgian (∼154 Ma) to Barremian (∼121 Ma) age from cores taken at sites offshore mid-Norway and in the Barents Sea that lay in a narrow seaway connecting the Tethys with the northern polar ocean. During the Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous these sites had paleolatitudes of 42–67°N. The Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous sequences at these sites reflect the global sea-level rise during the Volgian-Hauterivian and a climatic shift from warm humid conditions in Volgian times to arid cold climates in the early Hauterivian. The sediments indicate orbital control of climate, reflected in fluctuations in the clastic influx and variations in carbonate and organic matter production. Trace element concentrations in the Volgian-Berriasian sediments suggest that the central part of the Greenland-Norwegian Seaway might have had suboxic bottom water beneath an oxic water column. Both marine and terrigenous organic matter are present in the seaway sediments. The Volgian-Berriasian strata have unusually high contents of organic carbon and are the source rocks for petroleum and gas fields in the region. The accumulation of organic carbon is attributed to restricted conditions in the seaway during this time of low sea level. It might be that the Greenland-Norwegian segment was the deepest part of the transcontinental seaway, bounded at both ends by relatively shallow swells. The decline in organic matter content of the sediments in the Valanginian-Hauterivian indicates greater ventilation and more active flow through the seaway as the sea level rose. The same benthic foraminifera assemblages are encountered throughout the seaway. Endemic assemblages of arenaceous foraminifera in the Volgian-Berriasian give way to more diverse and cosmopolitan Valanginian-Hauterivian benthic communities that include calcareous species. The foraminiferal assemblages also suggest low oxygen content bottom waters during the earlier Cretaceous, changing to more fully oxygenated conditions later. The calcareous nannoplankton, particularly Crucibiscutum salebrosum, which is rare at low latitudes and abundant in high latitudes, reflect the meridional thermal gradient. They indicate that the Greenland-Norwegian segment of the seaway was north of a subtropical frontal zone that acted as a barrier between the Tethyan and Boreal Realms. This implies the existence of stable climatic belts during the early Valanginian and Hauterivian, significant meridional temperature gradients, and moderate “ice house” conditions.


Paleoceanography | 2003

Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous black shale formation and paleoenvironment in high northern latitudes: Examples from the Norwegian‐Greenland Seaway

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein; Marcus Lipinski; H.-J. Brumsack

[1] The Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous (Volgian-Ryazanian) was a period of a second-order sea-level low stand, and it provided excellent conditions for the formation of shallow marine black shales in the NorwegianGreenland Seaway (NGS). IKU Petroleum Research drilling cores taken offshore along the Norwegian shelf were investigated with geochemical and microscopic approaches to (1) determine the composition of the organic matter, (2) characterize the depositional environments, and (3) discuss the mechanisms which may have controlled production, accumulation, and preservation of the organic matter. The black shale sequences show a wide range of organic carbon contents (0.5–7.0 wt %) and consist of thermally immature organic matter of type II to II/III kerogen. Rock-Eval pyrolysis revealed fair to very good petroleum source rock potential, suggesting a deposition in restricted shallow marine basins. Well-developed lamination and the formation of autochthonous pyrite framboids further indicate suboxic to anoxic bottom water conditions. In combination with very low sedimentation rates it seems likely that preservation was the principal control on organic matter accumulation. However, a decrease of organic carbon preservation and an increase of refractory organic matter from the Volgian to the Hauterivian are superimposed on short-term variations (probably reflecting Milankovitch cycles). Various parameters indicate that black shale formation in the NGS was gradually terminated by increased oxidative conditions in the course of a sea-level rise. INDEX TERMS: 1055 Geochemistry: Organic geochemistry; 4802 Oceanography: Biological and Chemical: Anoxic environments; 9609 Information Related to Geologic Time: Mesozoic; 8105 Tectonophysics: Continental margins and sedimentary basins (1212); KEYWORDS: black shale formation, depositional environment, Norwegian-Greenland Seaway, Mesozoic, organic petrography Citation: Langrock, U., R. Stein, M. Lipinski, and H.-J. Brumsack, Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous black shale formation and paleoenvironment in high northern latitudes: Examples from the Norwegian-Greenland Seaway, Paleoceanography, 18(3), 1074, doi:10.1029/2002PA000867, 2003.


Marine and Petroleum Geology | 2004

Origin of marine petroleum source rocks from the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Norwegian Greenland Seaway—evidence for stagnation and upwelling

Uwe Langrock; Rüdiger Stein


Geo-marine Letters | 2003

Paleoenvironment and sea-level change in the early Cretaceous Barents Sea—implications from near-shore marine sapropels

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein; Marcus Lipinski; Hans-Jürgen Brumsack


Paleoceanography | 2003

The Greenland-Norwegian Seaway: A key area for understanding Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous paleoenvironments: CRETACEOUS EVOLUTION OF GREENLAND SEAWAY

Jörg Mutterlose; Hans J. Brumsack; Sascha Flögel; William W. Hay; Christian Klein; Uwe Langrock; Marcus Lipinski; Werner Ricken; Emanuel Söding; Rüdiger Stein; Oliver Swientek


Archive | 2004

Macerals in sediment core IKU-6814/04-U-02

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein


Archive | 2004

Geochemistry of sediment core IKU-6814/04-U-02

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein


Supplement to: Langrock, Uwe; Stein, Ruediger; Lipinski, Marcus; Brumsack, Hans-Jürgen (2003): Paleoenvironment and sea-level change in the early Cretaceous Barents Sea - implications from near-shore marine sapropels. Geo-Marine Letters, 23(1), 34-42, doi:10.1007/s00367-003-0122-5 | 2003

Bulk geochemical and Rock-Eval data of sediment core IKU-7430/10-U-01 (Table 1)

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein; Marcus Lipinski; Hans-Jürgen Brumsack


Supplement to: Langrock, U et al. (2003): Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous black shale formation and paleoenvironment in high northern latitudes: Examples from the Norwegian-Greenland Seaway. Paleoceanography, 18(3), 1074, https://doi.org/10.1029/2002PA000867 | 2003

(Table 1) Organic and inorganic geochemical analysis of Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous black shale sediments from the Norwegian-Greenland Seaway

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein; Marcus Lipinski; Hans-Jürgen Brumsack


Paleoceanography | 2003

Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous black shale formation and paleoenvironment in high northern latitudes: Examples from the Norwegian-Greenland Seaway: LATE MESOZOIC BLACK SHALE FORMATION

Uwe Langrock; Ruediger Stein; Marcus Lipinski; H.-J. Brumsack

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Ruediger Stein

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Rüdiger Stein

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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William W. Hay

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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