Abstract
Unravelling past, large-scale ocean circulation patterns is crucial for deciphering the long-term global paleoclimate. Here we apply numerical modelling to reconstruct the detailed paleobathymetry-topography of the southwestern inlet of the Barents Seaway that presently connects the Atlantic and Arctic oceans. Subaerial topography was likely enough to block Atlantic Water from entering the Barents Seaway in the earliest Eocene (c. 55 Ma). The water may have entered in the middle Eocene (c. 47 Ma) as observed from major basin subsidence, but paleotopographic highs to the east may have hindered connections between the two oceans. From the Oligocene (c. 33 Ma) until the onset of the Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma), basin shallowing and regional shelf uplift blocked Atlantic Water from entering the Barents Seaway. Our results imply that the Fram Strait remained the sole gateway for Atlantic Water into the Arctic Ocean since its opening in the Miocene until the Quaternary.
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Introduction
Ocean gateways and seaways play a major role as conduits that connect oceans and link their circulation. While gateways are likely related to opening of an ocean due to plate separation and therefore, are formed on oceanic crust (e.g., Fram Strait Gateway, Southern Ocean Gateways), the term “seaways” can be used more loosely to describe newly formed sea connections that often form on a continental crust (e.g., Barents Seaway). Seaways are also commonly used to describe a closure of two previously connected oceans (e.g., Tethys Seaway, Central American Seaway)1 and are generally wider and shallower than straits/gateways (e.g., Bering Strait, Nares Strait, Fig. 1a)2.
Ocean circulation is particularly important for Arctic climate as heat and moisture are distributed from lower to higher latitudes by the circulation of water masses3,4. At present, the North Atlantic and Arctic oceans are linked through the Fram Strait Gateway (Fig. 1a)5, and via the Barents Sea shelf (i.e., the Barents Seaway), which presently accounts for ~50% of the inflow of Atlantic Water into the Arctic Ocean6 (Fig. 1a). So far, work has largely focused on the evolution of the Fram Strait1,4,7,8,9,10,11, and very little is presently known on the Barents Seaway and its evolution, including its configuration since the Eocene (starting at c. 55 Ma) and through the repeated glaciations of the Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma). This knowledge gap is, at least partly, due to complexities involved in restoring glacial and pre-glacial paleobathymetry-topography on the glaciated Barents Sea margin. These complexities result from the intricate relationship of erosion–deposition (i.e., uncertainties in estimating the thickness of missing strata on the shelf and their time of erosion), the timing and effects of loading–unloading of sediments that resulted in flexural isostatic adjustment, and the complex rifting-related processes on this passive margin, see review by Lasabuda et al.12 (Fig. 1b).
Prior to the formation of the present-day Barents Seaway, early-mid Cenozoic tectonism caused oblique extension in the study area and finally it became a sheared margin after breakup. These events created overall rifting of sedimentary basins in the SW Barents Sea and stretching of the lithosphere. These effects are suggested to be laterally variable across the continental margin (i.e., spatial variation of beta factor/stretching), due to the variability of bedrock composition in the basins and highs in this area13,14. The cessation of rifting activity and cooling of the asthenosphere and the lithosphere caused thermal subsidence, the timing and effects of which must be accounted for to reconstruct the paleobathymetry-topography of the Barents Seaway area. Furthermore, unloading of sediments due to erosion by shallow marine, coastal, fluvial and glacial processes have influenced the paleobathymetry-topography of the shelf through flexural isostatic adjustment of the underlying lithosphere15,16,17 (Fig. 2a). Finally, sea-level variation throughout the Cenozoic might affect the reconstructed paleobathymetry-topography18,19, although this aspect may be of minor importance if the wider Barents Seaway is considered (see below).
Structural elements of the SW Barents Sea continental shelf consist of basins, highs/ridges and platforms as a result of Palaeozoic—early Cenozoic tectonic episodes, while the present-day bathymetry is characterized by major troughs and banks, shaped by glacial activity during the Quaternary (Fig. 2a, b). The paleogeographic (i.e., paleobathymetric–topographic) evolution of the Barents Shelf has mainly been reconstructed based on geomorphologic analysis using seismic reflection profiles and lithologic information from well data. Such reconstructions include the Paleocene–Eocene period of SW Barents Sea14,20,21 and the broader circum-Arctic22,23, whose reconstructions were possible using the relatively widespread distribution of Paleocene–Eocene sediments. However, there is still a high uncertainty in reconstructing bathymetry of the succeeding time interval (i.e., Oligocene–Miocene) based on solely subsurface data as these sediments are spatially limited. Previous paleobathymetric reconstructions for the Eocene–Quaternary are mostly more regional and of low resolution1,8,15,16,17,24 (Table 1). Thus, a detailed, high-resolution Eocene–Quaternary paleobathymetric reconstruction is lacking for the SW Barents Sea, an important area as it today acts as a shallow-water seaway for a considerable volume of Atlantic Water to enter the Arctic Ocean that has implications for thermohaline circulation including ocean temperatures and sea-ice cover25.
Prior to the early Cenozoic breakup separating Eurasian and Greenland plates, Cretaceous and earlier rifting events created deep sedimentary basins in the SW Barents Sea (e.g., Sørvestsnaget, Tromsø and Bjørnøya basins). The Cenozoic plate breakup at the Paleocene–Eocene transition (c. 55 Ma) was followed by seafloor spreading in the Norwegian–Greenland Sea. This major event affected vast areas along the western Barents Sea continental margin and resulted in a series of rotated fault blocks that affected Paleocene to mid-upper Eocene strata (Fig. 3a). This Cenozoic breakup was part of a broader Eurekan deformation26 involving Svalbard, NE Greenland and the Ellesmere Island in Arctic Canada.
In the Oligocene (c. 33 Ma), a major plate reorganization occurred where the Greenland plate moved northwestward together with North America. The Barents Shelf is generally considered to have been tectonically stable in this period, except locally in the Vestbakken Volcanic Province where rifting extended to the Oligocene13. Oligocene–Miocene strata are rather thin and restricted throughout the study area (Fig. 3a). In the Miocene, opening of the Fram Strait Gateway occurred, allowing for a ventilated Arctic Ocean (as today) from around 17 Ma4,10 that resulted in ocean circulation between NE Atlantic and Arctic oceans as evidenced from contourite sediment accumulations along the margins of the Barents Shelf27,28 and other nearby areas29,30.
The Quaternary marks the onset of major shelf-wide, ice-sheet glaciations in the Eurasian Arctic, including across the Barents Sea shelf. This glacial activity was responsible for major erosion of the shelf and the accumulation of eroded sediments along the western and northern continental margins of the Barents Sea, such as the Bjørnøya Trough Mouth Fan (TMF)31,32,33,34,35. The thickness of the Bjørnøya TMF today is up to 3.5 km, containing a total volume of up to 464,000 km336,37,38,39,40,41.
Unloading of sediments from the shelf resulted in the uplift of sedimentary basins to the extent of affecting hydrocarbon reservoir properties and leakage42 and hydrate-related fluid flow43 (Fig. 3b). The net erosion is estimated to have varied across structural elements in Barents Shelf and temporally throughout the Cenozoic12,14,17,39,44,45,46,47,48,49. In the western basins, net average glacial erosion is estimated to be 0–1500 m with differential erosion associated to troughs (c. 1000 m) and banks (c. 500 m)37. For the Miocene (pre-glacial), it has been suggested that the average erosion was markedly lower, c. 250 m concentrated in the area of Hammerfest Basin and up to c. 450 m on structural highs, such as Stappen High and Loppa High (these highs were not part of the modelling presented here)14.
This study focuses on the SW Barents Sea continental margin (Fig. 2b), part of the Norwegian Arctic where Atlantic Water masses currently split in two directions: one continuing northwards along the continental slope, and the other entering shelf areas (i.e., the southern inlet of the Barents Seaway). Our approach utilizes a 3D ‘backstripping’ technique50,51, which sequentially restores each sedimentary layer in a time-transgressive manner. We use the 3D MOVE numerical modelling software, in which parameters account for lithosphere thickness52,53, a beta factor for crustal stretching54,55 as well as glacial erosion and sediment properties14,32,37 (Fig. 2c, d). Thus, the aims of this paper are: (i) to model the paleobathymetry-topography in SW Barents Sea at five periods: the Eocene (c. 55 Ma, 47 Ma), Oligocene (c. 33 Ma), Miocene (c. 20 Ma), and the onset of the Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma), (ii) to estimate best-fit parameters associated with 3D flexural backstripping, reverse thermal subsidence and decompaction process, and (iii) to discuss the implications of the reconstructed paleobathymetry-topography on the evolution of large-scale Atlantic–Arctic water circulation.
Results and discussion
Our paleobathymetric and -topographic reconstructions cover an area where Paleocene to Quaternary strata are present. For the larger parts of the Barents Sea Paleocene-Miocene/early Pliocene are largely missing, therefore, our analysis of paleo-highs and lows for the wider Barents Sea is based on existing literature.
Early Eocene (55 Ma) reconstruction
The early Eocene paleobathymetry shows a predominantly shallow marine environment in the Tromsø Basin, Harstad Basin, Sørvestsnaget Basin, Vestbakken Volcanic Province, Hammerfest Basin, and a subaerial environment in the intrabasinal highs (i.e., Senja Ridge and Veslemøy High) (Fig. 4a). The well 7117/9-2 in Senja Ridge shows a very thin or severely eroded lower Eocene interval, which supports our early Eocene reconstruction map (Fig. 4a). Lower Eocene marine strata (outer neritic—upper bathyal with range from 100–500 m) based on well 7316/5-1 in Vestbakken Volcanic Province56,57 and 7216/11-1S in Sørvestsnaget Basin20 are in line with our reconstruction. Our palaeogeography which shows paleo-water depth (PWD) of 400 m at well 7316/5-1 and PWD of 450 m at well 7216/11-1S is also matched by recent basin modelling results55 that show the Vestbakken Volcanic Province as submarine and large parts of the Tromsø Basin as shallow marine with PWD of 100–400 m. The SW part of the Loppa High and NW part of Finnmark Platform appear partly subaerial (Fig. 4a), which is in agreement with seismic analysis by Knutsen and Vorren58.
For regional paleogeographical development in the Barents Seaway in the early Eocene (c. 55 Ma), a recent paleo-stress analysis59 shows that far-field stress may propagate to the northeastern part of the study area, leading to a development of paleotopographic highs, including anticlines and domes (e.g. Storbanken High). Other regional studies and source-to-sink analyses also suggest a subaerial paleo-Barents Sea to the east14,60.
Middle Eocene (47 Ma) reconstruction
The middle Eocene paleobathymetry shows major rift-related deepening compared to the early Eocene map. The northern Sørvestsnaget Basin shows a gradual depression that created basin accommodation for sediments to accumulate. Seismic data suggest a clinoform development sourced from the nearby Stappen High14,61. This finding is supported by muddy and sandy turbidite fans described from core data at well 7216/11-1S suggesting a deepwater paleoenvironment57,61. A deep marine shale interval at well 7316/5-1 in Vestbakken Volcanic Province also fits with our reconstruction that shows a PWD of 1000 m at this well location. Deep marine conditions (bathyal environment of up to 2000 m, Fig. 3b) also occurred in Sørvestsnaget and Tromsø Basins which are matched with our PWD of 800 m at well 7216/11-1S. Meanwhile, large parts of the Senja Ridge and Veslemøy High appear to be subsided and drowned (PWD of 50–300 m) but still sitting at a higher level compared to the surrounding basins, while other parts remain subaerial (paleotopographic of 30 m at well 7117/9-2 in Senja Ridge) (Fig. 4b). This observation agrees well with a tectonostratigraphic restoration using seismic data for this area20.
For a wider Barents Sea in the middle Eocene (c. 47 Ma), a source-to-sink study for the Cenozoic strata14 shows that there may have been paleotopographic highs to the east and north of the study area, where sediment progradations have been observed from seismic data in the Tromsø Basin and Sørvestsnaget Basin. This palaeogeography is also in agreement with a regional Eocene map60, which suggest a closed Barents Seaway for the entire Eocene.
Oligocene (33 Ma) reconstruction
The Oligocene paleobathymetry shows a major marine basin shallowing in the Sørvestsnaget Basin (two times shallower than in the middle Eocene) and Vestbakken Volcanic Province (PWD of 400 m at well 7316/5-1), which largely fits with well data20,57,62 (Fig. 4c). The Hammerfest Basin appears to be subaerial (up to 500 m a.s.l.). However, large parts of the Senja Ridge and Veslemøy High remain submerged (PWD of 100–300 m) like for the preceding middle Eocene period. This morphology may be explained by high erosion of these structural highs to the adjacent basins during the middle Eocene that resulted in thick middle-upper Eocene strata based on observation from seismic data (Fig. 3a). The overall basin shallowing and considerable erosion of exposed structural highs could be related to major sea-level fall in the Eocene-Oligocene transition19 and/or an uplift episode due to major changes in plate movement, which is also observed regionally in the Barents Sea12. This uplift is likely associated with a mantle rise and lithospheric thinning, volcanism and rift-flank uplift, whose rates are likely higher in areas along the continental margin12.
Our paleobathymetric map suggests an easterly extent of the Oligocene strata that covered Tromsø Basin, Veslemøy High, parts of Hammerfest Basin and Bjørnøya Basin (Fig. 4c). This is in line with the paleogeographical reconstruction using a mass balance analysis14 that suggested a paleoenvironment of shallow marine to shelf in Tromsø Basin, Sørvestsnaget Basin, and a fluvial to coastal plain paleoenvironment in Hammerfest Basin and Bjørnøya Basin to the east.
Miocene (23 Ma) reconstruction
The Miocene paleobathymetry shares an overall similar morphology with the Oligocene. The Tromsø Basin (PWD 200–500 m based on our reconstruction) and Vestbakken Volcanic Province (PWD of 500 m at well 7316/5-1) appear to be dominated by shallow marine environments (Fig. 4d), while the Sørvestsnaget Basin shows rather deeper marine (PWD of 900 m at well 7216/11-1S), which is contrary to the shallow marine well interpretation of Ryseth et al.20. We suspect that this part of the Sørvestsnaget Basin was formed into slope morphology during this time where contourites are found28. The structural highs (e.g., Senja Ridge, part of Veslemøy High, and part of the western flank of the Loppa High) and the Hammerfest Basin were predominantly positive features (up to 500 m a.s.l.).
Further to the east and north, this part of the Barents Shelf is suggested to have been subaerially exposed based on regional modelling and mass balance analysis8,14,63. Although some studies have suggested an open Barents Seaway sometime in the Miocene1,64,65, we find a mainly subaerial paleo-Barents Sea based on our sensitivity tests (see below), with all tested parameters indicating an eastward shallowing trend that led to a subaerial Barents Shelf. Our reconstruction is also in line with the available core data66 and well data from the Vestbakken Volcanic Province62 that show shallow marine environments (0–500 m). The northwestern part of the Barents Shelf (i.e., Svalbard) is considered a highland throughout the Miocene1,8,64, where an initial ice cap is suggested to have formed at c. 14 Ma8.
Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma) reconstruction
The paleobathymetric–topographic reconstruction at the onset of Quaternary is relatively similar to the early Miocene, displaying a predominantly shallow marine environment (PWD of 600 m at well 7316/5-1), slope morphology (PWD 900 m at well 7216/11-1S) and a subaerial topography to the east in the SW Barents Sea area (Fig. 4e). However, a smoother seafloor morphology is observed in most of the basinal parts. The shelf-slope transition is still present towards the west. The subaerial parts are mostly located in Hammerfest Basin (200–300 m a.s.l) and parts of Loppa High (up to 500 m a.s.l), as well as in basin margin areas.
Seismic mapping studies28,45 indicate a continued influx of Atlantic Water in the western margin of Barents Sea during this time. In areas farther east and north, the Barents Shelf is interpreted as a subaerial lowland based on a source-to-sink study39, regional modelling15,24,32,67, studies of upper slope processes34, and seismic mapping58 (Fig. 5a). However, a shallow water connection is suggested to exist at the Barents Seaway based on older data and modelling68. The shallow marine environments that existed between highs (i.e., paleo-Hammerfest Basin and paleo-Stappen High) may represent a favourable area for focused glacial erosion, which led to the development of Bjørnøya Trough where ice streams intensively eroded the substrate during Quaternary glaciations34,37.
Implications for Atlantic–Arctic ocean circulation
There is a general consensus on the early Miocene opening (c. 17 Ma) of the Fram Strait4,10 although an earlier (Eocene) inflow of Atlantic Water to the Arctic Ocean is also feasible69. The estimated timing of the opening of the Barents Seaway however, varies by millions of years. These discrepancies are mainly related to the resolution of the model applied (i.e., 100’s m vs 10’s km grid spacing), focus of the study (i.e., local versus regional Barents Sea or global), and the methods applied (e.g., Airy model vs flexural model). For example, although implementing an updated workflow and database, the focus of modelling by Straume et al.1 is on the opening of deep, oceanic gateways (e.g., Fram Strait) instead of shallow, continental seaways (e.g., the Barents Seaway). A review of previous work on the Barents Seaway and its southern inlet (the SW Barents Sea) is summarized in Table 1. Below, we discuss the implication for the timing of opening of the Barents Seaway from our high-resolution model and other more regional studies, and its implications to the Atlantic–Arctic water circulation.
The Eocene
At the Paleocene–Eocene transition (c. 55 Ma), our paleotopographic reconstruction appears to hinder water inflow through the Barents Seaway from the Atlantic. There may have been a connection between the Arctic and Atlantic Ocean as indicated by the Azolla event (~49-48 Ma) recorded in the ACEX drilling and other wells on the NE Atlantic margin70. However, these Azolla records appear to be linked to climatic conditions (at a thermal maximum) rather than an overflow of freshwater from the Arctic Ocean. This overflow, if it occurred, however, could not have been through the Fram Strait, which was not open or even formed yet due to a major compression in the area that formed the Eurekan-West Spitsbergen fold-thrust belt26,71. Therefore, a connection across the eastern Barents Shelf and/or Turgay Strait72 is here considered most likely.
Subsequent subsidence of the basins and drowning of structural highs in the middle Eocene (c. 47 Ma) in the SW Barents Sea may indicate a shallow water passage that allowed Atlantic Water to enter the Barents Seaway. However, there may have been paleotopographic highs existing to the east and north of the study area that blocked the connection between water masses14,59,60 (see discussion above). How deep and wide this connection eventually was, and to what extent it was involved in North Atlantic–Arctic water exchange, is not clear from the present study. An open Barents Seaway was previously postulated for the entire Eocene using sparse data from mainly Scandinavia63, and at c. 40 Ma based on global paleogeographical modelling73. However, from a regional mass balance analysis14 and global paleogeographical modelling1, the Barents Seaway is suggested to be closed for the entire Eocene.
Recent ocean circulation and climate modelling74 also indicate a closing of Barents Seaway and shallow opening of the Fram Strait at the end of Eocene, which contributed to global cooling (see below). Thus, we support a closed Barents Seaway during the entire Eocene60, although, based on our results alone, we cannot exclude the interpretation of an open, “proto” Barents Seaway during the middle Eocene (possibly linked to the Turgay Strait), followed by a gradual closing of this seaway during the late Eocene and full closure in the Oligocene. More detailed timesteps are clearly needed to reveal the exact development scenarios of the Barents Seaway during this time interval.
The Oligocene
Our reconstruction for the earliest Oligocene (c. 33 Ma) shows paleotopography that may have formed a barrier for Atlantic Water passing through the Barents Seaway. A closed Barents Seaway is also supported by a recent study based on a regional mass balance analysis14 and a global paleogeographical modelling1. The implication of a closed Barents Seaway and Fram Strait4, or at least a very shallow and narrow Fram Strait1,10 and thus, an isolated Arctic Ocean has been discussed by Hutchinson et al.3,75, who linked these configurations to major warming of the North Atlantic Ocean and cooling of the North Pacific at the Eocene–Oligocene Transition (EOT). These temperature changes can be explained by Atlantic meridional overturning circulation due to a lack of freshwater inflow from the Arctic, i.e., a closed Barents Seaway3. At the global scale, these events may have lowered global CO2 levels that led to the development of an Antarctic ice sheet in the Oligocene75.
The Miocene
Our paleobathymetric map (c. 23 Ma) shows an overall eastward shallowing trend, incorporating a deep-marine area to the west and a subaerial landscape to the east. Consequently, sediments are inferred to have been transported from eastern and northern source areas toward shallow marine and to deeper marine to the west and southwest in the Barents Sea area. Our Miocene reconstruction is in line with the regional sediment transport pattern and processes based on seismic mapping14,76. Furthermore, well data from 7216/11-1S and 7316/5-1 (on the paleo-slope) show predominantly muddy contouritic strata for the Miocene interval, while 7316/06-U-01 further east (paleo-shelf) includes a sandstone interval of early Miocene age57,66. The dominance of muddy contourites on the slope implies little run-off from the SW Barents Sea area (i.e., distant sediment source area) with eastern and northern positive topographies of Miocene age blocking the inflow of Atlantic Water.
In the Vestbakken Volcanic Province and Sørvestsnaget Basin, seismic stratigraphic analyses show contourites strata suggesting that Atlantic Water passed the study area northwards since the Miocene28. The external character (geometry) of contourites on the slope suggests a development of moat and drift28 that are associated with stronger currents and often found on a slope77. If the Barents Seaway was open and water could flow through the Fram Strait like today, the slope would have been dominated by a different type of contourites than of Rydningen et al.28, for example sand-rich (sheet-like) contourites that would indicate a closer distance to the sediment source area78.
The Quaternary
Our modelling results in the SW Barents Sea, combined with previous regional modelling to the east (see Table 1), suggest that the Barents Seaway did not exist at the onset of the Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma) (Fig. 4e). This finding means that the modern Barents Seaway opened sometime after c. 2.7 Ma. This configuration also implies that at the onset of the Quaternary, Atlantic Water must still have bypassed the SW Barents Sea area and flowed northwards towards the Fram Strait, the only gateway at this time (Fig. 5a). The predominantly subaerial environment in the greater Barents Sea regions is in some studies suggested to have persisted until 1.5 Ma, and that the Barents Seaway opened later at c. 1–0.7 Ma15,16,24.
A recent ice sheet reconstruction by Hjelstuen and Sejrup38 shows major expansion after 1.5 Ma until at least 0.5 Ma, where ice-sheets covered extensively from Svalbard to the southern coast of Norway including the Barents Sea. These massive ice-sheets would have temporarily hindered connection between both water masses from the Atlantic and from the Arctic via the Barents Seaway. This shelf-wide ‘blocking’ by ice-sheets, including in the SW Barents Sea, persisted through to the Last Glacial Maximum c. 20 ka based on a regional glacial sediment correlation41. Note that ice sheets have expanded and reduced/disappeared as well as advanced and retreated multiple times during each glacial cycle, affecting the regional ocean circulation throughout the Quaternary.
The presence of the Quaternary ice sheets across Eurasia led to a shelf-wide increase in the rate of erosion32,38. This erosion, primarily beneath fast-flowing ice streams, deepened the SW Barents Sea area, as reflected by the present-day trough morphology, the thickness of the glacial sediment depocentres adjacent to the major through mouths34,38, and the overall depth of the Barents Sea today (c. 200 m in average). Continental slope contourites28 documented an interaction of drift with glacigenic debrites that show an interplay between a northward flow of Atlantic Water and glacially induced gravity-driven processes during the Quaternary. As a result of the opening of the Barents Seaway sometime after 2.7 Ma, gradually more water is interpreted to have passed though the Barents Seaway during the Quaternary interglacials (Fig. 5b) while the inflow of Atlantic Water through the Fram Strait reduced, assuming a constant volume of Atlantic Water entering the NE Atlantic from the south. An oceanographic modelling approach is needed to further clarify the implications of this evolving configuration.
Conclusions
This study addresses the history of Atlantic Water inflow to the Arctic Ocean through the Barents Seaway from the Eocene through to the Quaternary at five time periods (c. 55 Ma, 47 Ma, 33 Ma, 20 Ma, and 2.7 Ma). The key results can be summarized as follows:
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We present high-resolution paleobathymetric/-topographic reconstructions using better constrained input from surfaces based on seismic data, calibration from well databases, and key parameters (e.g., thermal subsidence, flexural isostasy and decompaction) in a sequential “backstripping” process.
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At the earliest Eocene (c. 55 Ma), the subaerial topography of paleo-SW Barents Sea was likely enough to block Atlantic Water from entering the Barents Seaway. Major basin subsidence and deepening of the structural highs at c. 47 Ma may later have allowed Atlantic Water to enter this part of the Barents Seaway (i.e., SW Barents Sea) but then likely became blocked by paleo-highs to the east of the study area.
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At c. 33 Ma, 20 Ma, and 2.7 Ma, basin shallowing and regional shelf uplift indicate a continued blockade to Atlantic Water entering the Barents Seaway, with a gradual deepening from predominantly shallow marine to deeper marine environments towards the west.
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Our paleobathymetric-topographic reconstructions help to constrain the opening of the Barents Seaway to after c. 2.7 Ma. However, a more detailed chronologically based modelling is needed to better constrain the exact opening of the Barents Seaway during the Quaternary.
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After the onset of the Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma), the present Barents Sea was affected by profound glacial erosion and deepening. As a result, the area has gradually transformed from a subaerial to a submarine platform that allowed for a progressively increasing inflow of Atlantic Water across the Barents Seaway and into the eastern Arctic Ocean. Consequently, inflow of Atlantic Water through the Fram Strait reduced, assuming a constant volume of Atlantic Water entering into the Arctic.
Methods and uncertainties
Seismic horizon preconditioning
We used seismic horizons from Lasabuda et al.14 for the Base Paleocene (c. 66 Ma), Base Eocene (c. 55 Ma), Base Mid Eocene (c. 47 Ma), Base Oligocene (c. 33 Ma), Base Miocene (c. 23 Ma) and Base Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma) paleosurfaces (Fig. 6). The TWT (two-way travel time) surfaces were converted to depth (m) using the TGS J-Cube velocity model. An uncertainty for this velocity model might be related to locally sparse seismic data in the westernmost part of the study area. However, the velocity cube has been calibrated with a number of iterations using regional seismic and welld data to ensure its high-quality standard. The salt diapirs20 were not taken into consideration due to their local distribution to simplify modelling iteration without losing the integrity of the modelling steps (i.e., as shown in Fig. 7).
Backstripping workflow
The backstripping technique using the 3D MOVE numerical software incorporates decompaction using a porosity–depth curve79, thermal subsidence history80 and flexural isostasy50,51. The workflow performed in this study started with the present-day stratigraphic configuration consisting of the Cenozoic pre-glacial sediments overlain by glacigenic sediments (Fig. 7a). We removed the glacigenic sediments, then applied the decompaction step and restored the flexural isostasy (Fig. 7b). We reconstructed the missing part of the lower-middle Cenozoic strata by interpolating their surfaces onto the shelf using the thickness attribute module in MOVE (Fig. 7c).
When interpolating the base of Quaternary from the slope to the shelf, we defined a “hinge line” at the onset of glacial TMF growth (see Fig. 7a). This line represents a boundary between net glacial erosion to the east and glacial deposition to the west of this line (Fig. 2a).
Our surface interpolations towards the shelf correspond to a total missing thickness of c. 1175 m, which consists of Miocene (138 m), Oligocene (168 m), mid-Eocene (426 m), lower Eocene (200 m), and Paleocene (242 m) (Fig. 7c). This total thickness of missing sediments was distributed evenly on the shelf part of the study area, representing the glacial trough, where the study area is mostly located. This number fits well with the mass balance calculation for the glacial erosion in the Bjørnøyrenna Trough, which has been estimated to be c. 1000–1100 m37.
After adding subsidence due to the weight of the restored sediments on the shelf, the paleobathymetry for the onset of Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma) was reconstructed (Fig. 7d). Based on similar steps (i.e., removal of a layer, decompaction and flexural isostatic compensation), the paleobathymetry at the onset of Miocene (c. 23 Ma) was also reconstructed (Fig. 7e, f) before the middle Eocene (c. 47 Ma) and early Eocene (55 Ma) paleobathymetry were reconstructed.
Numerical model setup and sensitivity test
Due to computational limitations, there are some assumptions in this modelling. (1) We run the model on the continental crust, i.e., the oceanic crust is not included (Fig. 1b). Although the study area is located on the plate margin, where it is thinner, we assume that we are working with much of the full thickness of the lithosphere. We mitigate this uncertainty by testing three different lithosphere thicknesses (see below). (2) We also assume a homogenous lithosphere and crust, although, these are likely to be spatio-temporally heterogenous in thickness and rheology81.
We run our model using a c. 750 × 750 m grid spacing, which, as far as we are aware, is the highest model resolution applied in this region (Table 1). In this section, we highlight three key factors that are considered in this numerical modelling: thermal subsidence, flexural isostasy, and decompaction (Fig. 1b).
Thermal subsidence
Thinning of the lithosphere due to rifting allows for the hot asthenosphere to rise in the mantle. When rifting ends, the mantle material cools and becomes part of the mechanically rigid lithosphere, becoming denser and eventually sinking, enhancing the subsidence magnitude of the sedimentary basin. The effect of thermal subsidence exponentially decreases through time and lasts for about 100 Myrs80. Therefore, the effect of thermal subsidence due to rifting during the Paleocene–Eocene in the SW Barents Sea area will interfere with the effect of isostatic uplift, which has been accounted for during the modelling. We set the onset of rifting to 66 Ma (at the beginning of Paleocene), with a time span of 10 Myrs, i.e., until the approximate initiation of the breakup82 (Table 2). The uncertainty here may be related to a prolongation of the rifting period locally, e.g., Vestbakken Volcanic Province and part of the Sørvestsnaget Basin, where extension may have extended into Oligocene time13.
Flexural isostasy
The flexural isostasy model promotes the importance of regional compensation of the load considering the rigidity and strength of the lithosphere81. Flexural isostasy considers the crust as a visco-elastic plate, which responds to any perturbation on the load due to tectonics (e.g., compression–extension, uplift–subsidence) and surface processes (e.g., erosion–sedimentation, sediment loading–unloading). Ice sheet loading-unloading is relatively short-lived across geological timescales (c. tens of thousands of years) and therefore we only consider the tectonic effects that resulted from erosion and redistribution of sediments (Fig. 4). However, considering repeated loading pulse and dynamics of ice sheet advance and retreat, there could be an effect of overcompaction stages, leading to a slightly underestimated decompaction value which may be difficult to account for83.
We applied a flexural isostatic correction instead of the Airy model due to the size of the study area being large enough (c. 300 km width and length) to capture the flexure of the crust (Table 2). The flexural isostatic correction consists of weighing the initial lithospheric thickness h0 with the ratio between densities of the crust, ρc, and the mantle, ρm, to obtain81
The effective flexural rigidity (D) is defined as81
In Eq. (2), E is Young’s modulus of elasticity, Te is the effective elastic thickness and ν is Poisson’s ratio. Flexural isostasy depends strongly on the effective elastic thickness (Te) used in the model. The effective elastic thickness is an estimated thickness of an elastic layer which reflects the apparent strength of a loaded lithospheric plate.
We calculated the response for Te = 5, 10, 15, 20 and 30 km. All Te values show development of a deep marine paleobathymetry during the Miocene in the Sørvestsnaget Basin that is consistent with well data (Fig. 8a). This result means that the Te values are robust in this basin. However, in the Tromsø Basin the choice Te = 5 km shows lower erosion, which is in better agreement with the erosion analysis by Lasabuda et al.14, and is thus considered as the best-fit parameter. The same parameter choice, Te = 5 km has previously also been applied in the Barents Sea area54,55, resulting in consistent modelling outcomes.
As the study area is located near the plate margin (i.e., close to a transform fault), we ran a sensitivity test to assess the best-fit value among three lithospheric thicknesses (h0 = 60, 70 and 80 km). In previous large-scale modelling work of the greater Barents Sea, an initial lithospheric thickness of h0 = 120 km is commonly applied to refer to the situation prior to the long-term multiphase rifting history (i.e., not just the final rifting phase leading to breakup in Paleogene)84,85. Therefore, we did not include h0 = 120 km in the sensitivity test. Our sensitivity tests using lithospheric thicknesses of h0 = 70 and h0 = 80 km support this reasoning (multiphase rifting history) and gave unrealistic reconstructions (i.e., too much uplift), particularly for older strata (e.g., Eocene), which are inconsistent with available well data12. Therefore, we choose the value of h0 = 60 km which shows reasonable depth along the E–W transect of Miocene paleobathymetry (Fig. 8b). This value reflects a stretched continental margin following multiple rift phases over a long time span52,53 and this modelling addresses the final rifting episode in the Barents Sea, which may be valid reasons for this outcome.
For calculation of beta factors, we used a crustal thickness map from Klitzke et al.52 as this contains input from seismic data, which is a reliable constraint. We tested three initial thickness of continental crust (h0 = 25, 20 and 15 km) before it was stretched in the final rift phase leading to breakup. They reflect the thickness of the crust at the onset of the final rift phase, which was already thinner (due to stretching/thinning associated with the earlier rift phases). Therefore, we did not include h0 = 35 km as this value is a common reference thickness for the initial lithospheric extension assumed to happen in the late Palaeozoic. Our sensitivity test shows comparable depth variations of the three resulting Miocene paleobathymetries, particularly in the basin area (Fig. 8c). However, we chose a beta factor map that used an initial crustal thickness of h0 = 25 km because it shows the most subaerial profile in the Hammerfest Basin to the east, which fits with a source-to-sink analysis14. This value represents a crust that has undergone a long-term multiphase rift evolution in the study area53,55,86.
Decompaction
The decompaction procedure is a step to restore the porosity loss due to mechanical compaction during burial. A compaction curve represents a basin burial history, including net exhumation magnitude. The average porosity curve from well data located in basins which have experienced uplift on the Barents Shelf is compared to a ‘normal’ compaction curve from basins that experienced no or very little uplift, i.e., the North Sea79 or using other curves87,88.
The first step taken after removing the uppermost stratigraphic layer during the backstripping procedure is to decompact the underlying layers. The compaction here means a porosity reduction by both mechanical and chemical compaction (i.e., Quartz cementation). Decompaction parameters used are based on two average porosity–depth curves. The porosity ϕ was estimated from the bulk density ρb recorded by standard RHOB borehole logs according to
where ρma is the density of the matrix, and ρf is the fluid density89,90. We assumed that ρma = 2650 kg/m3 and ρf = 1000 kg/m3.
The average lower erosion curve was based on well 7216/11-1S in the Sørvestsnaget Basin, 7117/9-2 in the Tromsø Basin, 7117/9-1 on the Senja Ridge and 7316/5-1 in the Vestbakken Volcanic Province, which are in close fit with the porosity–depth curve of Sclater and Christie79 (Supplementary Fig. 1). The average higher erosion curve was based on wells 7119/9-1 in the Ringvassøy-Loppa Fault Complex (RLFC), 7016/2-1 in the Harstad Basin, 7121/4-1 in the Hammerfest Basin and wells 7319/12-1 and 7219/8-1S in the Bjørnøya Basin, but we did not use this curve as they show a thinner interval of Cenozoic strata that is not sufficient to create a reliable compaction curve.
We ran a sensitivity analysis by using different compaction curves (i.e., the one from well data, Sclater-Christie, Baldwin-Butler, and Dickinson curves, Fig. 8d). The Miocene paleobathymetric-topographic reconstruction using a compaction curve based on well data shows comparable depths with reconstructions using Sclater-Christie and Baldwin-Butler curves, particularly in the westernmost basins (Fig. 8d).
Furthermore, we applied surface porosity, depth coefficient, shale volume, grain size and density parameters for the decompaction step based on inspection of well data (Supplementary Table 1) as well as parameters from previous work in this area16,52,54,55. We specifically tested our lithological input based on Supplementary Table 1 against 100% sand and 100% shale to capture the effect of lithology in the resulting paleobathymetry-topography (Fig. 8e). The results show that 100% sand gives 30 m deeper depth while 100% shale gives 10 m shallower depths compared to the model using lithological inputs derived from wells (Fig. 8e).
Sea-level
Another uncertainty that is not directly addressed in the MOVE numerical software is the eustatic sea level. The long-term eustatic sea-level curve trend for the Miocene (c. 23 Ma) to Quaternary (c. 2.7 Ma) shows falling sea-level from c. 100 m to −100 m18. This means that the depth of the paleobathymetry for the Miocene is a minimum estimate as the sea level position may need to be adjusted up by to 100 m. Meanwhile, the depth of the Quaternary is a maximum estimate as depths may need to be reduced by up to 100 m. However, the eustatic sea-level variation estimated by Miller et al.19 is less pronounced, fluctuating with ranges from c. −50 to 50 m. Even if the sea-level was 100 m higher, the paleotopography to the east (outside our study area) will still be enough to block the Atlantic Water passing through the Barents Seaway. For the Oligocene–Miocene, the major shelf uplift to the east will still hinder the Atlantic–Arctic water connection. In summary, we did not alter the results of the paleobathymetry in this modelling, but we are aware of there may be a depth correction related to eustatic sea-level variations for future more-detailed denser-timespan reconstructions.
Dynamic topography
Another aspect that we have not assessed in detail is the dynamic topography, especially because our study area is located on the edge of the NE Atlantic. The residual topography estimation due to the arrival of the Iceland plume shows a diminishing pattern from 1350 to 1800 km away from Iceland91. However, this pattern may be different in older time episode, for example in the Eocene where Nordic Seas were narrower, and the plume were closer to the study area. This evolving pattern with respect to plate tectonics indicates that dynamic topography is an uncertainty in reconstructing paleobathymetry and -topography in our study area.
Data availability
The seismic and well data used in creating the seismic surfaces in this study are available from the DISKOS database of the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (https://www.npd.no/en/diskos/) and from TGS.
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Acknowledgements
This research was funded by the Akademia programme (Equinor & UiT The Arctic University of Norway). Financial support from the Research Council of Norway is acknowledged to the Research Centre for Arctic Petroleum Exploration (ARCEx) and “The dynamics of polar confined basins—the Eurasia Basin from breakup in greenhouse to present in icehouse conditions” (DYPOLE) projects (grants no. 228107 and 325984), and through its Centres of Excellence funding scheme (grants no. 223259 and 223272) for the Centre for Arctic Gas Hydrate, Environment and Climate (CAGE) and Centre for Earth Evolution and Dynamics (CEED). We acknowledge educational software licenses of Petrel (Schlumberger) and 3D MOVE (Petroleum Experts Ltd.) for the Department of Geosciences, UiT The Arctic University of Norway and the Department of Earth Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London. Perceptually uniform colour ramps of Crameri et al.92 were used to prevent visual distortion. We thank the reviewers, including Davide Gamboa and Morten Smelror, for their detailed and constructive comments.
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Open access funding provided by UiT The Arctic University of Norway (incl University Hospital of North Norway).
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A.P.E.L. performed the numerical modelling, wrote the initial manuscript and prepared the figures and tables. A.H. and J.S.L. conceived the study. M.M.A. prepared the beta factor maps. B.K. converted the seismic surfaces from time to depth. J.I.F, H.P., T.A.R and all authors contributed to editing and reviewing the manuscript.
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Communications Earth & Environment thanks Davide Gamboa, Morten Smelror and the other, anonymous, reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work. Primary Handling Editors: João Duarte and Joe Aslin. A peer review file is available.
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Lasabuda, A.P.E., Hanssen, A., Laberg, J.S. et al. Paleobathymetric reconstructions of the SW Barents Seaway and their implications for Atlantic–Arctic ocean circulation. Commun Earth Environ 4, 231 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-00899-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-023-00899-y
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