Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers

The overall aim of this research project has been to develop a reference dataset of 19 Holocene silicic Icelandic tephra layers sourced from the Torfajökull, Askja, Katla, Öræfajökull and Hekla volcanic systems. The dataset comprises geochemical data (including major, trace and rare earth element da...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Meara, Rhian Hedd
Other Authors: Thordarson, Thorvaldur, Fitton, Godfrey
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Edinburgh 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5834
id ftunivedinburgh:oai:era.ed.ac.uk:1842/5834
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivedinburgh:oai:era.ed.ac.uk:1842/5834 2023-07-30T04:04:00+02:00 Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers Meara, Rhian Hedd Thordarson, Thorvaldur Fitton, Godfrey 25/06/2012 application/msword application/vnd.ms-excel application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5834 en eng The University of Edinburgh LARSEN, G., THORDARSON, TH., HOSKULDSSON, A., GUDMUNDSSON, M. T., SVERRISDOTTIR, G., ODDSON, B., OSKARSSON, B. V., JONSDOTTIR, I., OLADOTTIR, B., THORSTEINSSON, T., HARTLEY, M. E. AND MEARA, R. 2010. On-land distribution and modes of deposition of the Eyjafjallajökull 2010 tephra. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2010, abstract #V53F-04. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5834 Iceland silicic fingerprint tephra Thesis or Dissertation Doctoral PhD Doctor of Philosophy 2012 ftunivedinburgh 2023-07-09T20:29:56Z The overall aim of this research project has been to develop a reference dataset of 19 Holocene silicic Icelandic tephra layers sourced from the Torfajökull, Askja, Katla, Öræfajökull and Hekla volcanic systems. The dataset comprises geochemical data (including major, trace and rare earth element data for bulk and glass phases collected by XRF, electron microprobe, ion probe and laser ablation ICP-MS) and physical data (including sedimentary logs, field photographs, distribution maps and GPS localities of reference sections). Results indicate that Icelandic volcanic systems show unique geochemical signatures which result from the systems proximity to the active rifting zone and the proposed upwelling mantle plume that underlies the island. Within individual volcanic systems, eruptions produce tephra with distinct geochemical characteristics, which allow for the independent confirmation of tephra identity. The identification and discrimination of tephra layers can in some cases be achieved using major element chemistry (e.g. Hekla, H1104 – H5) while other tephra layers can only be discriminated using trace element chemistry (e.g. Torfajökull, Landnám and Gràkolla). Certain tephra layers however show near-identical geochemistry and therefore discrimination is not possible (e.g. Hekla, HA, HB, HC, HM, HN, HX, HY, HZ) without the incorporation of other proxy data. Icelandic micro-tephra horizons are identified in soil, lacustrine and marine sedimentary sequences and are used for dating and correlation in Quaternary studies. Data collected for this project will facilitate reliable data comparison and tephra identification between proximal and distal localities across the North Atlantic region. The data may also contribute to the debate regarding the formation of silicic rocks within Iceland, particularly with regard to the Hekla central volcano. The geochemical data collected for this thesis shows distinct age-dependant geochemical sub-groups suggesting temporal sub-surface relocation of the Hekla magma source. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Hekla Iceland Katla North Atlantic Edinburgh Research Archive (ERA - University of Edinburgh) Katla ENVELOPE(-19.062,-19.062,63.631,63.631) Askja ENVELOPE(-16.802,-16.802,65.042,65.042) Torfajökull ENVELOPE(-19.027,-19.027,63.898,63.898)
institution Open Polar
collection Edinburgh Research Archive (ERA - University of Edinburgh)
op_collection_id ftunivedinburgh
language English
topic Iceland
silicic
fingerprint
tephra
spellingShingle Iceland
silicic
fingerprint
tephra
Meara, Rhian Hedd
Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
topic_facet Iceland
silicic
fingerprint
tephra
description The overall aim of this research project has been to develop a reference dataset of 19 Holocene silicic Icelandic tephra layers sourced from the Torfajökull, Askja, Katla, Öræfajökull and Hekla volcanic systems. The dataset comprises geochemical data (including major, trace and rare earth element data for bulk and glass phases collected by XRF, electron microprobe, ion probe and laser ablation ICP-MS) and physical data (including sedimentary logs, field photographs, distribution maps and GPS localities of reference sections). Results indicate that Icelandic volcanic systems show unique geochemical signatures which result from the systems proximity to the active rifting zone and the proposed upwelling mantle plume that underlies the island. Within individual volcanic systems, eruptions produce tephra with distinct geochemical characteristics, which allow for the independent confirmation of tephra identity. The identification and discrimination of tephra layers can in some cases be achieved using major element chemistry (e.g. Hekla, H1104 – H5) while other tephra layers can only be discriminated using trace element chemistry (e.g. Torfajökull, Landnám and Gràkolla). Certain tephra layers however show near-identical geochemistry and therefore discrimination is not possible (e.g. Hekla, HA, HB, HC, HM, HN, HX, HY, HZ) without the incorporation of other proxy data. Icelandic micro-tephra horizons are identified in soil, lacustrine and marine sedimentary sequences and are used for dating and correlation in Quaternary studies. Data collected for this project will facilitate reliable data comparison and tephra identification between proximal and distal localities across the North Atlantic region. The data may also contribute to the debate regarding the formation of silicic rocks within Iceland, particularly with regard to the Hekla central volcano. The geochemical data collected for this thesis shows distinct age-dependant geochemical sub-groups suggesting temporal sub-surface relocation of the Hekla magma source.
author2 Thordarson, Thorvaldur
Fitton, Godfrey
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Meara, Rhian Hedd
author_facet Meara, Rhian Hedd
author_sort Meara, Rhian Hedd
title Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
title_short Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
title_full Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
title_fullStr Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
title_full_unstemmed Geochemical fingerprinting of Icelandic silicic Holocene tephra layers
title_sort geochemical fingerprinting of icelandic silicic holocene tephra layers
publisher The University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5834
long_lat ENVELOPE(-19.062,-19.062,63.631,63.631)
ENVELOPE(-16.802,-16.802,65.042,65.042)
ENVELOPE(-19.027,-19.027,63.898,63.898)
geographic Katla
Askja
Torfajökull
geographic_facet Katla
Askja
Torfajökull
genre Hekla
Iceland
Katla
North Atlantic
genre_facet Hekla
Iceland
Katla
North Atlantic
op_relation LARSEN, G., THORDARSON, TH., HOSKULDSSON, A., GUDMUNDSSON, M. T., SVERRISDOTTIR, G., ODDSON, B., OSKARSSON, B. V., JONSDOTTIR, I., OLADOTTIR, B., THORSTEINSSON, T., HARTLEY, M. E. AND MEARA, R. 2010. On-land distribution and modes of deposition of the Eyjafjallajökull 2010 tephra. American Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2010, abstract #V53F-04.
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/5834
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