Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand

This thesis reports for the first time phreatomagmatic deposits and preserved Surtseyan tuff cones from the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. This research located the relicts of at least six, closely-spaced, Paleogene Surtseyan cones and associated bioclastic sediments within the Red Bluff Tuff Formati...

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Main Author: Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: Monash University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Eruption_erosion_and_post-volcanic_marine_faunal_colonization_the_Red_Bluff_Tuff_Formation_Chatham_Islands_New_Zealand/4657447
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spelling ftdatacite:10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4 2023-05-15T16:49:39+02:00 Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor 2017 https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4 https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Eruption_erosion_and_post-volcanic_marine_faunal_colonization_the_Red_Bluff_Tuff_Formation_Chatham_Islands_New_Zealand/4657447 unknown Monash University In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Uncategorized Text Thesis article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2017 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z This thesis reports for the first time phreatomagmatic deposits and preserved Surtseyan tuff cones from the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. This research located the relicts of at least six, closely-spaced, Paleogene Surtseyan cones and associated bioclastic sediments within the Red Bluff Tuff Formation (RBT). The complete stratigraphic section was studied in detail by means of fieldwork (sampling, logging, sketching and recording main structural and textural features) as well as comprehensive laboratory work (marine faunal taxonomy, grain-size, componentry and vesicularity analyses). It was found that RBT consists of two parts: 1) the lower part represents volcanic aggradational processes that constructed tuff cones in a short period of time (years) and is composed of a bedded interval of explosively fragmented, vesicular glassy basaltic pyroclasts (ash and lapilli sizes) as well as feeder-dykes, pillow-lavas and pillow-sills and 2) the upper part represents the rapid denudation of these cones by shallow marine currents or gravity-flows reflecting the instability of the tephra-pile forming the cones, and a much later complete marine faunal colonization stage (e.g. corals, brachiopods, molluscs). Erosion could have occurred almost immediately after (or even during) the emplacement of the volcanic pile, similar to what has occurred at Surtla vent, a satellite submerged cone of the basaltic island volcano Surtsey, Iceland; the Waiareka-Deborah Volcanics Bridge Point, Aorere Point, and Lookout Bluff Surtseyan cones (Otago, New Zealand); and Marion and Prince Edward islands (Southwest Indian Ocean). By contrast, the entire faunal colonization and stabilization of a diverse marine community could have taken hundreds, or perhaps even thousands of years to reach their acme following the volcanic pulses. The structural, textural and compositional characteristics of RBT support a phreatomagmatic mode of fragmentation similar to that at Surtsey Volcano, Iceland. Although RBT represents an extremely interesting, rare, and novel example to study pre-historic submarine volcanism very little research has been done on this volcanic sequence. Because the RBT sequence characterizes one of the most complete marine bioclastic tuff cones described in the geologic record the present study fills a large gap in our knowledge of the eruption and faunal recovery phases of submarine volcanoes. Thesis Iceland Prince Edward Islands Surtsey DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Indian New Zealand Lookout ENVELOPE(77.955,77.955,-68.605,-68.605) Surtsey ENVELOPE(-20.608,-20.608,63.301,63.301) The Cones ENVELOPE(78.344,78.344,-68.635,-68.635)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
spellingShingle Uncategorized
Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor
Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
topic_facet Uncategorized
description This thesis reports for the first time phreatomagmatic deposits and preserved Surtseyan tuff cones from the Chatham Islands, New Zealand. This research located the relicts of at least six, closely-spaced, Paleogene Surtseyan cones and associated bioclastic sediments within the Red Bluff Tuff Formation (RBT). The complete stratigraphic section was studied in detail by means of fieldwork (sampling, logging, sketching and recording main structural and textural features) as well as comprehensive laboratory work (marine faunal taxonomy, grain-size, componentry and vesicularity analyses). It was found that RBT consists of two parts: 1) the lower part represents volcanic aggradational processes that constructed tuff cones in a short period of time (years) and is composed of a bedded interval of explosively fragmented, vesicular glassy basaltic pyroclasts (ash and lapilli sizes) as well as feeder-dykes, pillow-lavas and pillow-sills and 2) the upper part represents the rapid denudation of these cones by shallow marine currents or gravity-flows reflecting the instability of the tephra-pile forming the cones, and a much later complete marine faunal colonization stage (e.g. corals, brachiopods, molluscs). Erosion could have occurred almost immediately after (or even during) the emplacement of the volcanic pile, similar to what has occurred at Surtla vent, a satellite submerged cone of the basaltic island volcano Surtsey, Iceland; the Waiareka-Deborah Volcanics Bridge Point, Aorere Point, and Lookout Bluff Surtseyan cones (Otago, New Zealand); and Marion and Prince Edward islands (Southwest Indian Ocean). By contrast, the entire faunal colonization and stabilization of a diverse marine community could have taken hundreds, or perhaps even thousands of years to reach their acme following the volcanic pulses. The structural, textural and compositional characteristics of RBT support a phreatomagmatic mode of fragmentation similar to that at Surtsey Volcano, Iceland. Although RBT represents an extremely interesting, rare, and novel example to study pre-historic submarine volcanism very little research has been done on this volcanic sequence. Because the RBT sequence characterizes one of the most complete marine bioclastic tuff cones described in the geologic record the present study fills a large gap in our knowledge of the eruption and faunal recovery phases of submarine volcanoes.
format Thesis
author Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor
author_facet Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor
author_sort Sorrentino-Mariconda, Leonor
title Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
title_short Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
title_full Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
title_fullStr Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the Red Bluff Tuff Formation, Chatham Islands, New Zealand
title_sort eruption, erosion and post-volcanic marine faunal colonization, the red bluff tuff formation, chatham islands, new zealand
publisher Monash University
publishDate 2017
url https://dx.doi.org/10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Eruption_erosion_and_post-volcanic_marine_faunal_colonization_the_Red_Bluff_Tuff_Formation_Chatham_Islands_New_Zealand/4657447
long_lat ENVELOPE(77.955,77.955,-68.605,-68.605)
ENVELOPE(-20.608,-20.608,63.301,63.301)
ENVELOPE(78.344,78.344,-68.635,-68.635)
geographic Indian
New Zealand
Lookout
Surtsey
The Cones
geographic_facet Indian
New Zealand
Lookout
Surtsey
The Cones
genre Iceland
Prince Edward Islands
Surtsey
genre_facet Iceland
Prince Edward Islands
Surtsey
op_rights In Copyright
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/03/58a4e80816cb4
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