Abstract Carbonate mud mounds developed within the Baltoscandian Basin, an epicratonic basin on the Baltica palaeocontinent, during the Ordovician. In the Upper Ordovician succession of the Baltoscandian Basin, a large… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Carbonate mud mounds developed within the Baltoscandian Basin, an epicratonic basin on the Baltica palaeocontinent, during the Ordovician. In the Upper Ordovician succession of the Baltoscandian Basin, a large number of mud mounds are present at three stratigraphic levels namely, the Kullsbergs mounds (late Sandbian-early Katian), Nabala and Rakvere mounds (middle Katian), and the Boda mounds (late Katian). These formed in a subtropical-tropical carbonate platform environment, covered by a shallow epicontinental sea. The mud mounds at these stratigraphic levels beneath and around Gotland have been characterized using a comprehensive seismic and well dataset acquired during a period of hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation which began more than 30 years ago. Interpretation of the largely unpublished seismic data in this study provides details on the distribution of mound complexes in the basin and constraints on the geometry of the mounds. Detailed structure contour maps of the top and the base of the Ordovician succession beneath Gotland based on the seismic interpretation are presented. The results give a comprehensive characterization of carbonate mud mound generation on Gotland which may help in understanding the distribution patterns of similar mound complexes in other parts of the Ordovician world formed in similar environments.
               
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