Chronology and glass chemistry of tephra and cryptotephra horizons from lake sediments in northern Alaska, U.S.A.
Holocene tephrostratigraphy in Alaska provides independent chronology and stratigraphic correlation in a region where reworked old (Holocene) organic carbon can significantly distort radiocarbon chronologies. Here we present new glass chemistry and chronology for Holocene tephras preserved in three...
Published in: | Quaternary Research |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
Published: |
2017
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/407681/ https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/407681/1/Monteath_et_al_Accepted_Manuscript_QR.pdf |
Summary: | Holocene tephrostratigraphy in Alaska provides independent chronology and stratigraphic correlation in a region where reworked old (Holocene) organic carbon can significantly distort radiocarbon chronologies. Here we present new glass chemistry and chronology for Holocene tephras preserved in three Alaskan lakes: one in the eastern interior, and two in the southern Brooks Range. Tephra beds in the eastern interior lake-sediment core are correlated with the White River Ash and the Hayes tephra set H (~4200-3700 cal yr BP), while an additional discrete tephra bed is likely from the Aleutian Arc-Alaska Peninsula. Cryptotephras (non-visible tephras) found in the Brooks Range include the informally named “Ruppert tephra” (~2700-2300 cal yr BP), and the Aniakchak caldera-forming event II tephra (CFE II; ~3600 cal yr BP). A third underlying Brooks Range cryptotephra is chemically indistinguishable from the Aniakchak CFE II tephra (4070-3760 cal yr BP) and is likely to be from an earlier eruption of the Aniakchak volcano. |
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