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  • Elsevier  (7)
  • 2020-2024  (7)
  • 2023  (7)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Defining a precise timeline for past eruptions from explosive volcanoes in continental arcs is imperative to forecast future hazards and mitigate volcanic disasters in these often densely populated regions. However, establishing reliable ages for Quaternary eruptions in the Central American Volcanic Arc has been challenging due to the common lack or alteration of suitable K-rich phases for 40Ar/39Ar geochronology, but also from their position in time beyond the reach of 14C dating. This especially holds for the active Amatitlán caldera in Guatemala, from which at least six explosive silicic eruptions have produced tephra blanketing neighboring regions that are today inhabited by millions of people. Zircon, a common datable accessory mineral in Amatitlán caldera magmas, is used here to retrieve eruption ages by applying the novel zircon double-dating method (ZDD) that integrates 238U–230Th disequilibrium dating and (U–Th)/He thermochronology. This approach yielded the first-ever radioisotopic ages of 24 ± 3 ka and 48 ± 6 ka (1σ), respectively, of two of Amatitlán caldera's most recent eruptions (J-tephra and E-tephra). Remarkably, both zircon crystallization and ZDD eruption ages for the older and voluminous T-tephra and L-tephra units significantly post-date existing plagioclase 40Ar/39Ar dates by ca. 26 and 70 kyr, respectively. The ZDD eruption age for T-tephra is 93 ± 4 ka, whereas zircon crystallization ages for L-tephra yield a maximum model eruption age of ca. 124 ka. The strong eruption age divergence between ZDD and plagioclase 40Ar/39Ar dating argues for the presence of inherited or xenocrystic plagioclase in Amatitlán caldera eruptive products. Statistical analysis based on the updated eruptive history suggests a recurrence interval of ca. 17 kyr, which is significantly shorter than previously estimated. The new age data, thus, suggest a more frequent eruptive activity of Amatitlán caldera than formerly thought and underscores the necessity to better understand the current underlying magmatic system and to constrain its past eruptive history more precisely.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Extensive and protracted volcanism in the Carpathian-Pannonian Region climaxed during the Early to Middle Miocene with series of major ignimbrite-forming eruptions with their products dispersed across the Alpine-Mediterranean Region. The spatial and temporal dispersion of these volcanic horizons make them potentially important stratigraphic markers throughout the region, allowing better understanding of temporal and spatial changes in depositional environments and paleoclimate. Several of these Middle Miocene volcaniclastic layers are preserved in stratigraphically and environmentally variable sedimentary facies on Mt. Medvednica, located in the North Croatian Basin. In order to decipher the age, depositional environment and provenance of two volcaniclastic horizons intercalated within Central Paratethys marine sediments on Mt. Medvednica, we applied an integrated approach of volcanological, geochronological, and paleontological analyses. New high-precision zircon geochronology and volcanic glass geochemistry data allow to distinguish two primary rhyolitic volcaniclastic horizons derived from distinct eruptions, “Plaz“, and the “Bidrovec“, dated at 14.937 ± 0.012 Ma and 14.835 ± 0.012 Ma. Distinguished mineralogical and geochemical data enabled the correlation of the older (“Plaz”) horizon on Mt. Medvednica with the Demjén eruption, one of the six major Early–Middle Miocene ignimbrite-forming eruptions of the Carpathian-Pannonian Region. However, a correlation of the younger (“Bidrovec“) horizon and assignment to a specific eruption could not be established due to a lack of compositional data from coeval eruption products throughout the region. The newly gathered data establishes both “Plaz” and “Bidrovec” pyroclastic deposits as valuable marker horizons for regional reconstructions, and enable a better understanding of the eruption chronology and tephrostratigraphy of the Carpathian-Pannonian Region.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The Carpathian-Pannonian Region (CPR) hosted some of the largest silicic volcanic eruptions in Europe during the Early and Middle Miocene, contemporaneously with major lithospheric thinning of the Pannonian Basin. This was recorded as an ignimbrite flare-up event from approximately 18.1–14.4 Ma. To gain in-depth perspectives on the eruption chronology, tephrostratigraphy, and petrogenesis at the onset of CPR silicic volcanism, we applied a multi-proxy approach to Lower Miocene rhyolitic ignimbrites and pyroclastic fall deposits from the northern CPR to the Dinaride Lake System. High-precision zircon U-Pb geochronology distinguished two Lower Miocene groups of volcaniclastic rocks at ∼ 18.1 Ma and ∼ 17.3 Ma. Based on combined tephrostratigraphic signatures we propose that the ∼ 18.1 Ma Kalnik and ∼ 17.3 Ma Eger eruptions produced widespread (intermediate to) large caldera-forming massive rhyolitic ignimbrites, deposited across northern and southwestern regions of the CPR. Due to easterly winds that carried volcanic ash hundreds of kilometers to the southwest, Eger eruption products also reached distal intra-montane Dinaride lacustrine basins, recorded as pyroclastic fall deposits. Heterogeneous major and trace elemental compositions of ∼ 18.1 Ma volcanic glass shards suggest that the Kalnik eruption was sourced from complex silicic magmatic systems, with simultaneous tapping of two discrete melt bodies during the eruption. The homogeneous geochemical composition of ∼ 17.3 Ma glasses is distinct from the older glasses. Integrated zircon and bulk glass Nd-Hf isotope compositions have a positive correlation, defining a regional mantle array, and are more radiogenic in the younger phase of volcanism. The recorded systematic isotopic change, moving from older more crustal signatures to younger more juvenile compositions, imply that during the period of lithospheric thinning of the Pannonian Basin the region underwent more complex variations in the interaction between metasomatized lithospheric mantle-derived magmas and various crustal components than previously recognized.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Highlights • Comprida Volcanic System ∼3180 cal yr BP eruption was the latest at Flores Island. • Eruptive style shifted from Hawaiian-Strombolian to phreatomagmatic. • All five (maybe six) phreatomagmatic craters were formed during a single eruption. • CVS eruption is nearly contemporary with a large gravitational flank collapse. • Future hazard assessments should consider the hydrologic characteristics of Flores. Abstract The stratigraphy and eruptive history of a volcanic system are key to forecast the timing and style of future eruptions. Flores is a small volcanic island in the Azores Archipelago with no record of eruptions since its settlement in the 15th century, although at least six eruptions are known to have occurred during the Holocene. Thus, Flores must be considered potentially active, and its volcanic hazard should not be disregarded. The most recent eruptions clustered at two centres of activity: the Funda Volcanic System (FVS) and the Comprida Volcanic System (CVS). Here, we reconstruct for the first time the eruptive history of CVS, the youngest volcanic system of Flores. Based on detailed tephrostratigraphic and geomorphological work, combined with radiocarbon dating and glass shard geochemistry, we show that – despite featuring five (maybe six) phreatomagmatic craters – CVS was formed in a single volcanic eruption at ∼3180 cal yr BP. This eruption started with Hawaiian-style lava fountaining followed by Strombolian activity, dispersing tephra fallout across the central part of the island. Lava flows were also emitted during the initial phase, which drained to the west and cascaded over the older deposits of the massive slump of Fajãzinha–Fajã Grande, and possibly reached the coastline to form the Fajã Grande lava delta. The initial magmatic phase was followed by phreatomagmatic explosions that formed several maars and tuff rings. Hence, groundwater played an important role in the eruption by transforming a mild Hawaiian-Strombolian eruption into a highly explosive phreatomagmatic event, possibly due to oscillations in the eruption rate. The occurrence of a large landslide contemporary to the eruption, raises the possibility of a combined threat. A new and more robust volcanic hazard assessment for the island involving scientists and civil protection authorities is desirable.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-14
    Description: Provenance studies of widely distributed tephra deposits are important to deduce systematic changes in the source, size, distribution, and temporal variation of regional explosive volcanism. Long-term deep ocean drilling sedimentary records are particularly useful for these kind of studies. In this study, we establish a robust tephrochronostratigraphy for 235 primary marine tephra layers collected during International Ocean Discovery Program Expeditions 353, 354, and 362, complemented by older drill cores from Deep Sea Drilling Program and Ocean Drilling Program Legs 22, 119, 120, 121, and 183. We infer at least two major phases of highly explosive arc volcanism during the Early Miocene to Pleistocene, as well as three episodes related to explosive ocean island volcanism located in the Kerguelen plateau, the Broken Ridge, and close to Réunion reaching back to the Paleogene. Twenty-two widespread arc-derived tephra layers from individual eruptions can be correlated by geochemical fingerprinting between multiple holes. These provide nine Quaternary and 13 Neogene temporal tie points in the sedimentary sequence including four new Usingle bondPb zircon ages. Provenance analysis of the marine tephra layers, which is based on glass composition, assign eleven of these layers to a Toba-like source, ranging from 24 Ma to 75 ka, with the youngest correlative being Young Toba Tuff. Based on distribution pattern, thickness decay, and compositional evidence another eleven tephra layers can be assigned to a northern Sumatran Arc or to an Andaman Arc provenance. First-order minimum eruptive volume estimates for the Neogene tephra layers imply eruptive magnitudes ranging from M = 6.5 to M = 7.5, proving a continuous history of large explosive eruptions from the Sumatran/Andaman Arc since the Neogene, as previously known from the Quaternary.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-14
    Description: The Toba Caldera on Sumatra, Indonesia is the host of the Young Toba eruption (~74 ka), globally one of the largest and most recognized eruptions during the Quaternary and regionally concentrated in the eastern Indian Ocean. Three older deposits (Middle, and Old Toba Tuff as well as Haranggaol Dacite Tuff) are also attributed to Toba caldera, with their eruption products distributed over the Indian Ocean. We present the Quaternary marine tephra record from an array of 14 sites and 28 holes from deep ocean drilling programs, complementing earlier work on distal to ultra-distal Indian Ocean sediment cores and terrestrial distribution data of Toba deposits. A unique set of major and trace element glass-shard compositions on 115 primary ash layers together with glass shard morphologies, core pictures and statistical analysis support geochemical fingerprinting between marine tephra layers and known deposits from Toba and five so far unidentified medium to large eruptions assigned to northern Sumatra. Additionally, zircon crystallization ages have been determined for the Haranggaol Dacite Tuff resulting in a new maximum eruption age of 1.42 ± 0.034 Ma. Tephra volumes and magma masses for the (co-ignimbrite) fallout are estimated based on the compiled marine tephra distribution that are complemented by published proximal ignimbrite volumes. For YTT the resulting tephra and DRE volumes of 5600 km3 and 3600 km3, respectively, are in between the previous estimates. For MTT (253 km3 DRE), ODT (1550 km3 DRE), HDT (129 km3 DRE), and the five additionally identified eruptions from Northern-Sumatran volcanoes, new magma volumes have been determined. Overall, the Indian Ocean tephra record reveals in one large eruption every 200 kyr in the Quaternary that is derived from northern Sumatra.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-14
    Description: Alteration of volcanogenic aluminosilicates (VAs) in marine sediments is recognized as critical in regulating geochemical cycles and sustaining the oceanic deep biosphere, but rates of VA alteration and its associated authigenic mineral formation are not commonly reported. Here we present results on analyses of sediments and pore water recovered from the upper 150 mbsf of four sites drilled on the northern Hikurangi margin during IODP Expeditions 372 and 375. Petrographic analyses show that volcanogenic materials (glass shards, feldspar, volcanic lithoclasts) constitute important components (15–45 wt%) of the hemipelagic mud, and reveal ongoing glass alteration with accompanying authigenic phase formation. A reaction-transport model constrained by pore water Sr, 87Sr/86Sr, Ca, Mg, and Si was applied to simulate VA diagenetic reactions. Our model results yield VA alteration rates of 0.047–0.64 mmol Sr m−2 yr−1, with substantially higher values at Sites U1517 and U1520 that experienced rapid sediment emplacement. In addition, our simulations show that 〉99% of the dissolved Si generated by VA alteration is fixed in silica cement and authigenic clay, and that ∼50% of Ca incorporated in the authigenic carbonate is supplied by VA alteration. First-order estimates suggest that, in addition to authigenic carbonate precipitation, authigenic clay formation may represent an important sink for dissolved Mg. This study quantitatively examines the linkage between VA alteration and formation of authigenic phases, highlights its role in subsurface geochemical cycles, and indicates that slope instability may play an important role in promoting VA diagenesis.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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