Authors
Michael Cassidy, Sebastian FL Watt, Martin R Palmer, Jessica Trofimovs, William Symons, Suzanne E Maclachlan, Adam J Stinton
Publication date
2014/11/1
Source
Earth-Science Reviews
Volume
138
Pages
137-155
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Detailed knowledge of the past history of an active volcano is crucial for the prediction of the timing, frequency and style of future eruptions, and for the identification of potentially at-risk areas. Subaerial volcanic stratigraphies are often incomplete, due to a lack of exposure, or burial and erosion from subsequent eruptions. However, many volcanic eruptions produce widely-dispersed explosive products that are frequently deposited as tephra layers in the sea. Cores of marine sediment therefore have the potential to provide more complete volcanic stratigraphies, at least for explosive eruptions. Nevertheless, problems such as bioturbation and dispersal by currents affect the preservation and subsequent detection of marine tephra deposits. Consequently, cryptotephras, in which tephra grains are not sufficiently concentrated to form layers that are visible to the naked eye, may be the only record of many explosive …
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