The HALIP event lasted from 130 million years ago to approximately 60 million years ago. During its active period, there were two distinct phases of volcanism. The first phase lasted from 130 million years ago to 80 million years ago and was characterized by
tholeiitic igneous activity. During this time, numerous
dikes and
sills formed, and there were eruptions of
basaltic flow. The basalts formed at this time are relatively rich in TiO2 and have a similar composition to continental
flood basalts. The second phase lasted from approximately 85 million years ago to 60 million years ago and was characterized by mildly alkaline igneous activity and the eruption of flood basalts. The
igneous rocks formed during the second phase have a similar geochemical makeup as the intra-plate composition. The
Arctic Ocean is a few hundred million years old, making it the youngest ocean on Earth. In the
Precambrian, when the Arctic was located south of the Equator, the continent
Arctica (or Arctida) filled the gap between the
cratons that today surround the Arctic region. Arctica
rifted apart in the Late Precambrian (950 Ma) and was reassembled in a new configuration in the Late Paleozoic (255 Ma). ic
headland of
Franz Josef Land During the
Jurassic–Cretaceous this second continent, known as
Pangea, broke apart, opening the
Amerasian Basin and the Arctic Ocean. HALIP dispersed the components of this second continent around the margins of the Arctic Ocean where they are now
terranes and microplates embedded into fold belts or overlain by sediments. As the
Atlantic and Arctic oceans opened during the
Mesozoic and into the
Cenozoic, the Arctic Region underwent several stages of rifting, sedimentation, and magmatism.
Dolerites collected from Svalbard and elsewhere in the Arctic are
mafic intra-plate
tholeiites characteristic of HALIP, which indicated that the LIP formed during the opening of the Arctic Ocean around 148–70 Ma. Seismic and magnetic analyses of the seafloor produced ages of 118–83 Ma. The HALIP is widely thought to have originated from a
mantle plume, and the igneous activity of the province often tracked along a similar path as the
Icelandic hotspot. == Magmatic provinces ==