Authors
Chris Satow, EL Tomlinson, KM Grant, PG Albert, VC Smith, CJ Manning, Luisa Ottolini, Sabine Wulf, EJ Rohling, JJ Lowe, SPE Blockley, MA Menzies
Publication date
2015/6/1
Source
Quaternary Science Reviews
Volume
117
Pages
96-112
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Tephra layers preserved in marine sediments can contribute to the reconstruction of volcanic histories and potentially act as stratigraphic isochrons to link together environmental records. Recent developments in the detection of volcanic ash (tephra) at levels where none is macroscopically visible (so-called ‘crypto-tephra’) have greatly enhanced the potential of tephrostratigraphy for synchronising environmental and archaeological records by expanding the areas over which tephras are found. In this paper, crypto-tephra extraction techniques allow the recovery of 8 non-visible tephra layers to add to the 9 visible layers in a marine sediment core (LC21) from the SE Aegean Sea to form the longest, single core record of volcanic activity in the Aegean Sea. Using a novel, shard-specific methodology, sources of the tephra shards are identified on the basis of their major and trace element single-shard geochemistry, by …
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