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Geological Society, London, Memoirs; 1992; v. 13; p. 107-129;
DOI: 10.1144/GSL.MEM.1992.013.01.12
© 1992 Geological Society of London

Jurassic

M. J. Bradshaw, J. C. W. Cope, D. W. Cripps, D. T. Donovan, M. K. Howarth, P. F. Rawson, I. M. West & W. A. Wimbledon

The interplay of regional or global sea-level changes and continuing crustal extension related to rifting in the North Atlantic and Tethyan megarifts dominated the palaeogeographical evolution of the area. The sea-level rise that commenced in the Rhaetian continued into the Jurassic to usher in a new phase of predominantly marine sedimentation across northwest Europe. The climate was warm and humid, the seas generally shallow. Land areas became well vegetated, as attested by the abundance of fossil driftwood in marine as well as non-marine sediments. The region probably lay about 10° south of present latitudes, in an area of overlap of Tethyan and Boreal marine realms. For much of the Jurassic, sea levels continued to rise but two major falls occurred, coinciding with accelerated extensional movements in the area. The first was during the mid-Jurassic ('mid-Cimmerian phase') when there was a major regional upwarp centred on the North Sea, and the second across the Jurassic/Cretaceous boundary ('late Cimmerian phase') when a global fall in sea level coincided with an important phase of rifting and block faulting. Major structural trends generally follow previously established lines. The basic structural framework for the Jurassic maps has been compiled from numerous sources, including Andrews &Brown (1987); Dunning (1985); Evans et al. (1982); Gardiner &Sheridan (1981); Van Hoorn (1987); Thomas et al. (1985); Whittaker (1985); Ziegler (1982, 1987); and papers in Brooks &Glennie (1987). Fault trends are generalized and selected to pick out the main structural features controlling the geography; their occurrence on

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