The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia

The discovery of sites preserving tephra layers from multiple volcanic centres is key to constructing a single European tephrostratigraphic framework for the Late Quaternary. Until now, the tephrostratigraphy of Europe has been divided into two halves: sites in the North Atlantic and northern Europe...

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Main Authors: Lane, Christine S., Andrič, Maja, Cullen, Victoria L., Blockley, Simon P E
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/7b061c6c-9258-4578-8f2d-8b32aefe3cfa
https://pure.manchester.ac.uk/ws/files/27885191/POST-PEER-REVIEW-PUBLISHERS.PDF
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spelling ftumanchesterpub:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/7b061c6c-9258-4578-8f2d-8b32aefe3cfa 2023-11-12T04:22:45+01:00 The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia Lane, Christine S. Andrič, Maja Cullen, Victoria L. Blockley, Simon P E 2011-05 application/octet-stream https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/7b061c6c-9258-4578-8f2d-8b32aefe3cfa https://pure.manchester.ac.uk/ws/files/27885191/POST-PEER-REVIEW-PUBLISHERS.PDF eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Lane , C S , Andrič , M , Cullen , V L & Blockley , S P E 2011 , ' The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia ' , Quaternary Science Reviews , vol. 30 , no. 9-10 , pp. 1013-1018 . Neapolitan yellow tuff Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction Tephrochronology Tephrostratigraphy Vedde ash article 2011 ftumanchesterpub 2023-10-30T09:14:50Z The discovery of sites preserving tephra layers from multiple volcanic centres is key to constructing a single European tephrostratigraphic framework for the Late Quaternary. Until now, the tephrostratigraphy of Europe has been divided into two halves: sites in the North Atlantic and northern Europe regions link the Icelandic, Eifel, and the Massif Central volcanic histories; whilst sites in southern Europe record the sequence of tephra layers produced by circum-Mediterranean volcanic provinces. The missing link, able to tie together these two halves, is found in the tephrostratigraphic record of Lake Bled, Slovenia.Lake Bled, in the Julian Alps, Slovenia, holds a high resolution multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental archive for the Lateglacial of south-central Europe. Cryptotephra investigations have revealed three tephra layers: two closely spaced within Younger Dryas stadial sediments and one shortly after the start of the Bølling-Allerød interstadial warming. Two of the tephra layers (Bld_T120 and Bld_T240) are of Campanian origin and are correlated to deposits of the Pomici Principali (PP) and Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) eruptions, respectively. The third layer (Bld_T122) correlates to the Icelandic Vedde Ash (VA), extending the known fallout of this widespread marker layer farther to the southeast.The Lake Bled record also allows the stratigraphic relationship and relative ages of the VA and the PP eruption to be discerned for the first time. Whilst existing numerical age estimates for these two deposits are indistinguishable within errors, their close occurrence in the same lacustrine sediment sequence shows that the VA was erupted shortly prior to the PP eruption.The tephrostratigraphy of Lake Bled developed here helps us to tie together regional volcanic stratigraphies into a broader, continental-scale lattice of sites, with the potential to allow the transfer of dates between remote sequences and the construction of relative chronologies, beneficial in particular for environmental and archaeological ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic The University of Manchester: Research Explorer
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Manchester: Research Explorer
op_collection_id ftumanchesterpub
language English
topic Neapolitan yellow tuff
Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction
Tephrochronology
Tephrostratigraphy
Vedde ash
spellingShingle Neapolitan yellow tuff
Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction
Tephrochronology
Tephrostratigraphy
Vedde ash
Lane, Christine S.
Andrič, Maja
Cullen, Victoria L.
Blockley, Simon P E
The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
topic_facet Neapolitan yellow tuff
Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction
Tephrochronology
Tephrostratigraphy
Vedde ash
description The discovery of sites preserving tephra layers from multiple volcanic centres is key to constructing a single European tephrostratigraphic framework for the Late Quaternary. Until now, the tephrostratigraphy of Europe has been divided into two halves: sites in the North Atlantic and northern Europe regions link the Icelandic, Eifel, and the Massif Central volcanic histories; whilst sites in southern Europe record the sequence of tephra layers produced by circum-Mediterranean volcanic provinces. The missing link, able to tie together these two halves, is found in the tephrostratigraphic record of Lake Bled, Slovenia.Lake Bled, in the Julian Alps, Slovenia, holds a high resolution multi-proxy palaeoenvironmental archive for the Lateglacial of south-central Europe. Cryptotephra investigations have revealed three tephra layers: two closely spaced within Younger Dryas stadial sediments and one shortly after the start of the Bølling-Allerød interstadial warming. Two of the tephra layers (Bld_T120 and Bld_T240) are of Campanian origin and are correlated to deposits of the Pomici Principali (PP) and Neapolitan Yellow Tuff (NYT) eruptions, respectively. The third layer (Bld_T122) correlates to the Icelandic Vedde Ash (VA), extending the known fallout of this widespread marker layer farther to the southeast.The Lake Bled record also allows the stratigraphic relationship and relative ages of the VA and the PP eruption to be discerned for the first time. Whilst existing numerical age estimates for these two deposits are indistinguishable within errors, their close occurrence in the same lacustrine sediment sequence shows that the VA was erupted shortly prior to the PP eruption.The tephrostratigraphy of Lake Bled developed here helps us to tie together regional volcanic stratigraphies into a broader, continental-scale lattice of sites, with the potential to allow the transfer of dates between remote sequences and the construction of relative chronologies, beneficial in particular for environmental and archaeological ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lane, Christine S.
Andrič, Maja
Cullen, Victoria L.
Blockley, Simon P E
author_facet Lane, Christine S.
Andrič, Maja
Cullen, Victoria L.
Blockley, Simon P E
author_sort Lane, Christine S.
title The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
title_short The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
title_full The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
title_fullStr The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
title_full_unstemmed The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia
title_sort occurrence of distal icelandic and italian tephra in the lateglacial of lake bled, slovenia
publishDate 2011
url https://research.manchester.ac.uk/en/publications/7b061c6c-9258-4578-8f2d-8b32aefe3cfa
https://pure.manchester.ac.uk/ws/files/27885191/POST-PEER-REVIEW-PUBLISHERS.PDF
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Lane , C S , Andrič , M , Cullen , V L & Blockley , S P E 2011 , ' The occurrence of distal Icelandic and Italian tephra in the Lateglacial of Lake Bled, Slovenia ' , Quaternary Science Reviews , vol. 30 , no. 9-10 , pp. 1013-1018 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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