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The Jurassic of Skåne, Southern Sweden

Ahlberg, Anders LU ; Sivhed, Ulf and Erlström, Mikael (2003) In Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin 1. p.527-541
Abstract
In Sweden, Jurassic strata are restricted to Skåne and adjacent offshore areas. Jurassic sedimentary

rocks predominantly comprise sandy to muddy siliciclastics, with subordinate coal beds and

few carbonate-rich beds. During Mesozoic times, block-faulting took place in the Sorgenfrei–

Tornquist Zone, a tectonic zone which transects Skåne in a NW–SE direction. The Jurassic depositional

environments in Skåne were thus strongly influenced by uplift and downfaulting, and to

some extent by volcanism. Consequently, the sedimentary record reveals evidence of numerous

transgressions, regressions and breaks in sedimentation. Relative sea-level changes played a significant

role in... (More)
In Sweden, Jurassic strata are restricted to Skåne and adjacent offshore areas. Jurassic sedimentary

rocks predominantly comprise sandy to muddy siliciclastics, with subordinate coal beds and

few carbonate-rich beds. During Mesozoic times, block-faulting took place in the Sorgenfrei–

Tornquist Zone, a tectonic zone which transects Skåne in a NW–SE direction. The Jurassic depositional

environments in Skåne were thus strongly influenced by uplift and downfaulting, and to

some extent by volcanism. Consequently, the sedimentary record reveals evidence of numerous

transgressions, regressions and breaks in sedimentation. Relative sea-level changes played a significant

role in controlling the facies distribution, as deposition mainly took place in coastal plain

to shallow shelf environments.

The alluvial deposits in Skåne include floodplain palaeosols, autochthonous coals, overbank

sandstones, and stream channel pebbly sandstones. Restricted marine strata comprise intertidal

heteroliths with mixed freshwater and marine trace fossil assemblages, and intertidal delta distributary

channel sandstones. Shallow marine sediments encompass subtidal and shoreface sandstones

with herringbone structures, and bioturbated mudstones with tempestite sandstones.

Offshore deposits typically comprise extensively bioturbated muddy sandstones.

Floral remains, palaeopedology, clay mineralogy and arenite maturity indicate a warm and

humid climate in Skåne throughout the Jurassic, possibly with slightly increasing aridity towards

the end of the period. Most Jurassic strata in Skåne have been subjected to mild burial diagenesis,

and the petroleum generative window has rarely been reached. (Less)
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Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
lithostratigraphy, Jurassic, Danish Basin, Fennoscandian Border Zone, Skåne, southern Sweden, depositional environments, diagenesis
in
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin
volume
1
pages
527 - 541
publisher
Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Ministry of Climate and Energy
external identifiers
  • scopus:1842786521
ISSN
1811-4598
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
39f75a21-bc28-49dc-9c4e-4221245c6dba (old id 794476)
alternative location
http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull/nr1_p527-541.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 11:59:58
date last changed
2022-01-26 21:22:48
@article{39f75a21-bc28-49dc-9c4e-4221245c6dba,
  abstract     = {{In Sweden, Jurassic strata are restricted to Skåne and adjacent offshore areas. Jurassic sedimentary<br/><br>
rocks predominantly comprise sandy to muddy siliciclastics, with subordinate coal beds and<br/><br>
few carbonate-rich beds. During Mesozoic times, block-faulting took place in the Sorgenfrei–<br/><br>
Tornquist Zone, a tectonic zone which transects Skåne in a NW–SE direction. The Jurassic depositional<br/><br>
environments in Skåne were thus strongly influenced by uplift and downfaulting, and to<br/><br>
some extent by volcanism. Consequently, the sedimentary record reveals evidence of numerous<br/><br>
transgressions, regressions and breaks in sedimentation. Relative sea-level changes played a significant<br/><br>
role in controlling the facies distribution, as deposition mainly took place in coastal plain<br/><br>
to shallow shelf environments.<br/><br>
The alluvial deposits in Skåne include floodplain palaeosols, autochthonous coals, overbank<br/><br>
sandstones, and stream channel pebbly sandstones. Restricted marine strata comprise intertidal<br/><br>
heteroliths with mixed freshwater and marine trace fossil assemblages, and intertidal delta distributary<br/><br>
channel sandstones. Shallow marine sediments encompass subtidal and shoreface sandstones<br/><br>
with herringbone structures, and bioturbated mudstones with tempestite sandstones.<br/><br>
Offshore deposits typically comprise extensively bioturbated muddy sandstones.<br/><br>
Floral remains, palaeopedology, clay mineralogy and arenite maturity indicate a warm and<br/><br>
humid climate in Skåne throughout the Jurassic, possibly with slightly increasing aridity towards<br/><br>
the end of the period. Most Jurassic strata in Skåne have been subjected to mild burial diagenesis,<br/><br>
and the petroleum generative window has rarely been reached.}},
  author       = {{Ahlberg, Anders and Sivhed, Ulf and Erlström, Mikael}},
  issn         = {{1811-4598}},
  keywords     = {{lithostratigraphy; Jurassic; Danish Basin; Fennoscandian Border Zone; Skåne; southern Sweden; depositional environments; diagenesis}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{527--541}},
  publisher    = {{Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Ministry of Climate and Energy}},
  series       = {{Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland Bulletin}},
  title        = {{The Jurassic of Skåne, Southern Sweden}},
  url          = {{http://www.geus.dk/publications/bull/nr1_p527-541.pdf}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2003}},
}