Precambrian Research, 64 (1993) 3-21 3
Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam
Frontiers in the Baltic Shield
Roland Gorbatschev* and Svetlana Bogdanova
Institute of Geology, Lund University, Srlvegatan 13, S-223 62 Lund, Sweden
Accepted August 22, 1993
ABSTRACT
Recent work in the Baltic Shield and its continuation in the basement of the East European Platform has created a new
image of the Precambrian in the northeastern half of Europe.
Towards the southeast, a continuation of the crust in the Shield can be traced to a Proterozoic system of palaeorifts in
the East European Platform. These rifts apparently reproduce an earlier Precambrian crustal boundary that separates
Fennoscandia, the northwestern crustal segment of the East European Craton, from its other two segments, Sarmatia and
Volgo-Uralia.
In the Archaean of Fennoscandia, the granite-greenstone province in Karelia is the only part that has ages in excess of 3
Ga. Interpretations of the Belomorian Belt along the White Sea and part of the Kola Peninsula as Early Archaean are
therefore untenable.
Rifting and break-up between 2.5 and 2.0 Ga strongly affected and partly dispersed the Archaean Domain. In the north,
the resultant basins were closed by collisional orogeny between ~ 1.95 and 1.82 Ga ago. Semi-simultaneously, the Sveco-
fennian orogeny created the continental crust in the central Baltic Shield. The Svecofennian Orogen continues into the
area southeast of the Baltic Sea where a system of beltiform structures extends to the fault boundary with central Europe,
featuring westward younging from ~ 2.0 to 1.8 Ga.
In the west, the Svecofennian Orogen is truncated by the ensialic Transscandinavian Igneous Belt of ~ 1.8-1.65 Ga age.
The final stage of extensive crust formation in the Baltic Shield occurred in western Scandinavia between ~ 1.75 and
1.55 Ga ago. Many of the granites in the interior of Fennoscandia are better explained as intracratonic manifestations of
this process than as late- or post-orogenic products of the orogenies that created the immediately surrounding crust.
After its formation, the continental crust of Fennoscandia underwent major reworking during the Sveconorwegian-
Grenvillian and Caledonian orogenies ~ 1.2-0.9 and 0.5-0.4 Ga ago. A previously unknown realm of crustal stacking and
high-pressure Sveconorwegian metamorphism has recently been discovered in southwestern Sweden.
While the formation of new and the reworking of preexisting continental crust in Fennoscandia was a consequence
predominantly of processes at destructive plate margins, the geodynamics cannot be interpreted in terms of a succession
of more or less uniform cyclic orogenies of similar duration. Although there were Late Archaean and Palaeoproterozoic
activity maxima in the formation of new continental crust in the Baltic Shield, the definition of individual orogenies
requires a new look.
1. Introduction
The well exposed and easily accessible Baltic
Shield is an excellent place to study the for-
mation of continental crust from the Middle
Archaean onwards. In a North-Atlantic per-
spective, the Baltic Shield is the connecting link
between the cratons of northeastern Europe
and Laurentia which may have been parts of a
*Corresponding author.
single supercontinent during much of the Late
Archaean and the Proterozoic.
IGCP Project 275 "Deep Geology of the
Baltic/Fennoscandian Shield" was launched to
bring together the students of the Baltic Shield
across the many international boundaries and
to integrate geophysics and geology in the cre-
ation of consistent crustal models. To provide
a reference area of adequate size, correlation
across the North Atlantic (cf. particularly
Gower et al., 1990) and access to data and
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