Upper North Sea Group

Code
NU
Status
Formal (NAM & RGD 1980). Amended (Van Adrichem Boogaert & Kouwe 1997). The NU-Group, NM-Group and NL-Group can be taken together as North Sea Supergroup (code N).
Lithological description

Clay and fine-grained to coarse sand, locally gravel or peat and brown-coal seams. There is a general trend from coarse- to fine-grained sediments towards the north and west.

Depositional setting

Shallow-marine, mainly deposited in the western Netherlands, and fluvial, paralic and lacustrine. In the upper part glacigenic.

Definition of lower boundary

In most places, the succession unconformably overlies the Middle North Sea Group, or older beds.

Definition of upper boundary

Present-day land surface or sea floor.

Thickness indication
Up to 1500 m.
Geographical distribution
Regional correlation
UK: upper part of the Westray Group and the Nordland Group; GER: no equivalent group; BEL: no equivalent group.
Age
Miocene - Holocene.
Holostratotype
Depth (thickness) AH:
0 - 234 m (234 m)
Origin of name
Named after the North Sea. The prefix ‘Upper’ is used to denote the upper part of the clastic sequence above the Chalk Group.
Previous name(s)
None.
Reviewed by (date)
Geert-Jan Vis (2019).
References
NAM & RGD 1980. Stratigraphic nomenclature of The Netherlands. Verhandelingen van het Koninklijk Nederlands Geologisch Mijnbouwkundig Genootschap 32, 77 p.
Van Adrichem Boogaert, H.A. & Kouwe, W.F.P. 1997. Stratigraphic nomenclature of The Netherlands, revision and update by RGD and NOGEPA, Section I, Tertiary. Mededelingen Rijks Geologische Dienst, 50, 1-39.
Cite as
TNO-GDN ([YEAR]). Upper North Sea Group. In: Stratigraphic Nomenclature of the Netherlands, TNO – Geological Survey of the Netherlands. Accessed on [DATE] from http://acc.dinoloket.nl/en/stratigraphic-nomenclature/upper-north-sea-group.