Search results for "Tephra"

showing 10 items of 41 documents

Luminescence dating of loess deposits from the Remagen-Schwalbenberg site, Western Germany

2015

Geochronometria 42(1), 67-77 (2015). doi:10.1515/geochr-2015-0008

Marine isotope stageThermoluminescence datingGeochemistryFeldsparPaleosol620visual_artLoessEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)visual_art.visual_art_mediumStadialddc:620TephraGeomorphologyQuartzGeology
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Calabrian and Ionian: A proposal for the definition of Mediterranean stages for the Lower and Middle Pleistocene

2006

The need to standardise stratigraphical subdivisions of continuous marine sedimentary successions that outcrop for hundreds metres, using clearly defined points fixed in the field is strongly felt. A proposal is presented here to formalize regional stages for the Lower Pleistocene (Calabrian) and for the Middle Pleistocene (Ionian) in Italy. The sections are well exposed, carefully investigated using multiple criteria (an integrated stratigraphical approach) and located in the central part of the Mediterranean. This area is recognized worldwide as a classical region for the Neogene and the Pleistocene sequences. The terrestrial record is directly correlated with the deep-sea record, as dete…

Mediterranean climateCHRONOSTRATIGRAPHYMAGNETOSTRATIGRAPHYPleistocenesequence stratigraphyMEDITERRANEAN STAGESTEPHRASTRATIGRAPHYsequence boundaryPleistocenePaleontologySTRATOTYPESGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesCalabrianNeogeneGeology
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Scavenging of sulphur, halogens and trace metals by volcanic ash: The 2010 Eyjafjallajökull eruption

2013

The Eyjafjallajökull volcanic eruption in 2010 released considerable amounts of ash into the high troposphere-low stratosphere, leading to unprecedented disruption of air traffic over Europe. The role of such fine-grained tephra in adsorbing, and therefore rapidly scavenging, volcanogenic volatile elements such as sulphur and halogens, is explored here. We report on results (major to trace element chemistry) of leaching experiments carried out on 20 volcanic ash samples, taken from the deposits of the main phases of the eruption (March–April 2010), or directly while falling (5–9 May 2010). Ash leachate solutions from Eyjafjallajökull are dominated – among cations – by Ca and Na, and display…

Mineralogyexplosive volcanismvolcanic eruptionVolcanic GasesGeochemistry and Petrologyddc:550eventTrace metalVOLCANIC ASHmonitoring systemTephraVolatilesScavengingevent.disaster_typeVulcanian eruptionplumeChemistrystratosphere-troposphere interactionTrace elementtephrahalogentrace metalexplosive volcanism; VOLCANIC ASH; EyjafjallajökullEyjafjallajökullsulfurEnvironmental chemistryvolcanic gasVolcanic ashGeochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
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40 Ar/ 39 Ar ages of fallout tephra layers and volcaniclastic deposits in the sedimentary succession of the western Woodlark Basin, Papua New Guinea:…

2001

PleistoceneGeochemistryNew guineaPyroclastic rockGeologyOcean EngineeringVolcanismEcological successionStructural basinSedimentary rockPetrologyTephraGeologyWater Science and TechnologyGeological Society, London, Special Publications
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PETROLOGICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL CONSTRAINTS OF THE PRE-ERUPTIVE CONDITIONS OF LA SOMMATA BASALT AND BROWN TUFFS TEPHRA (AEOLIAN ISLANDS)

2011

The principal focus of this thesis was the reconstruction of pre-eruptive conditions of two key eruptions at Vulcano island, the Brown Tuffs and the La Sommata, by combining the melt inclusion approach with phase equilibria derived by crystallization experiments. Brown Tuffs (the most energetic and widely distributed eruption of the Archipelago) were produced by several eruptions that occurred in a large age interval, 78-7.7 ka B.P. At Vulcano BT deposits crop out as proximal facies. La Sommata centre (age ca. 50 ka B.P.), is instead a basaltic scoria cone fed by one of the most primitive magmas of Aeolian Arc with ankaramitic affinity. Pyroxene-hosted melt inclusions on Lower and Intermedi…

SOMMATA BASALTBROWN TUFFS TEPHRAAEOLIAN ISLANDSPETROLOGICALPRE-ERUPTIVESettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologia
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Core description collected during Oceanographic Survey NextData2013 (12 – 19 September 2013)

2013

Sediment Core Micropaleontology Sedimentology Paleoclimatology Tephra
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Final Report of the Oceanographic Survey NextData201. Project NEXTDATA WP-1.5 : Paleoclimatic Data from Marine Sediments

2013

The retrieval of series of proxy data on the past climate will serve to acquire a deeper understanding of the climate system and a more accurate prediction of its future development, as a priority task for the scientific community. In particular, the analysis of climate data of the past is an essential tool for studying the dynamics of the earth's climatic system in conditions different from present ones, and irreplaceable for testing the validity of medium- and long-term forecasting models. The determination of the influence of anthropogenic impacts on the planet’s environment is predicated on a clear understanding of the natural ways in which the earth's climate responds to the complex se…

Settore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaSettore GEO/01 - Paleontologia E PaleoecologiaSediment Core Micropaleontology Sedimentology Paleoclimatology Tephra
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Source and Nature of Inhaled Atmospheric Dust from Trace Element Analyses of Human Bronchial Fluids

2011

International audience; Rapid volcanic eruptions quickly ejecting large amounts of dust provoke the accumulation of heavy metals in people living in surrounding areas. Analyses of bronchoalveolar lavage samples (BAL) collected from people exposed to the paroxysmal 2001 Etna eruption revealed a strong enrichment of many toxic heavy metals. Comparing the BAL to the dust composition of southeastern Sicily, we found that only V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, and U enrichment could be related to the volcanic event, whereas Ni, Cu, Cd, and Pb contents come from the dissolution of particles of anthropogenic origin. Furthermore, the nature of these inhaled anthropogenic particles was revealed by anomalous La and…

TEPHRA010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences550 - Earth sciencesVolcanic EruptionsPM2.5010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesvolcanic eruptionBRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGEatmospheric particulatetrace element distributionDISSOLUTIONTRACEREnvironmental ChemistryHumansVOLCANIC ASHTephraDissolutionSicilyERUPTION0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographyInhalation Exposuregeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryAtmosphereTrace elementDustGeneral ChemistryAtmospheric dustParticulatesReference Standardsatmospheric particulate; trace element distribution; volcanic eruptionTrace ElementsSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E Vulcanologiarespiratory tract diseasesTrace elements lanthanides medical geochemistry bronchoalveolar lavagesVolcanoSolubility13. Climate actionEnvironmental chemistryBronchoalveolar Lavage FluidVolcanic ashEnvironmental MonitoringASH PARTICLES
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Towards a dendrochronologically refined date of the Laacher See eruption around 13,000 years ago

2020

Highlights • Previous age estimates of the Laacher See Eruptions (LSE) around 12,900 years are still diverging and imprecise. • The combination of dendrochronology, wood anatomy, and 14C measurements holds the potential to establish a precise LSE date. • An absolute calendric date of the LSE would improve the synchronization of European Late Glacial to Holocene archives. Abstract The precise date of the Laacher See eruption (LSE), central Europe’s largest Late Pleistocene volcanic event that occurred around 13,000 years ago, is still unknown. Here, we outline the potential of combined high-resolution dendrochronological, wood anatomical and radiocarbon (14C) measurements, to refine the age …

TEPHRA010506 paleontologyArcheology010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesPleistoceneVARVE CHRONOLOGYPyroclastic rock01 natural scienceslaw.inventionVOLCANIC-ERUPTIONPaleontologylawINTCAL13Glacial periodRadiocarbon datingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHolocene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesCALIBRATIONGlobal and Planetary Changegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySubfossilGeologyRECORDABRUPT CLIMATE-CHANGEPALAEOLAKEVolcano13. Climate actionMEERFELDER MAARBiologieSEDIMENTSGeologyQuaternary Science Reviews
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Tephra-stack of combined sediment record ELSA

2016

Tephra layers of individual volcanic eruptions are traced in several cores from Eifel maar lakes, drilled between 1998 and 2014 by the Eifel Laminated Sediment Archive (ELSA). All sediment cores are dated by 14C and tuned to the Greenland interstadial succession. Tephra layers were characterized by the petrographic composition of basement rock fragments, glass shards and characteristic volcanic minerals. 10 marker tephra, including the well-established Laacher See Tephra and Dümpelmaar Tephra can be identified in the cores spanning the last glacial cycle. Older cores down to the beginning of the Elsterian, show numerous tephra sourced from Strombolian and phreatomagmatic eruptions, includin…

Tephra or volcanic ashAgeEarth System ResearchTephra marker
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