Porcupine Seabight Basin | |
---|---|
Stratigraphic range: Paleozoic to Mesozoic [1] | |
Type | Oceanic Basin |
Unit of | Atlantic Borderland Basins |
Area | 60,000 km2 [2] |
Location | |
Region | Southwest of Ireland |
Type section | |
Region | Territorial Waters |
Country | Ireland |
The Porcupine Seabight or Porcupine Basin is a deep-water oceanic basin located on the continental margin in the northeastern portion of the Atlantic Ocean.[3] It can be found in the southwestern offshore portion of Ireland and is part of a series of interconnected basins linked to a failed rift structure associated with the opening of the Northern Atlantic Ocean.[4] The basin extends in a North-South direction and was formed during numerous subsidence and rifting periods between the Late Carboniferous and Late Cretaceous.[1] It is bordered by the
Due to subsidence, water depths range from 3000 m in the south near its mouth to 400 m in the north.[5] The Porcupine Basin lies on the Caledonian metamorphic basement and preserves up to 12 km of sedimentary strata from Late Palaeozoic to Quaternary which includes significant hydrocarbon reservoirs.[4] Sediment was likely sourced from the uplifted Caledonian metamorphic rocks of the Porcupine Median Ridge.[4]
The basin lent its name to Operation Seabight, an Irish drug-bust of November 2008.[6]