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  • 2010-2014  (111)
  • 2005-2009  (97)
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  • 1
    In: Geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems, Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2000, 11(2010), 5, 1525-2027
    In: volume:11
    In: year:2010
    In: number:5
    In: extent:18
    Description / Table of Contents: Submarine slope failures occur at all continental margins, but the processes generating different mass wasting phenomena remain poorly understood. Multibeam bathymetry mapping of the Middle America Trench reveals numerous continental slope failures of different dimensions and origin. For example, large rotational slumps have been interpreted to be caused by slope collapse in the wake of subducting seamounts. In contrast, the mechanisms generating translational slides have not yet been described. Lithology, shear strength measurements, density, and pore water alkalinity from a sediment core across a slide plane indicate that a few centimeters thick intercalated volcanic tephra layer marks the detachment surface. The ash layer can be correlated to the San Antonio tephra, emplaced by the 6000 year old caldera-forming eruption from Masaya-Caldera, Nicaragua. The distal deposits of this eruption are widespread along the continental slope and ocean plate offshore Nicaragua. Grain size measurements permit us to estimate the reconstruction of the original ash layer thickness at the investigated slide. Direct shear test experiments on Middle American ashes show a high volume reduction during shearing. This indicates that marine tephra layers have the highest hydraulic conductivity of the different types of slope sediment, enabling significant volume reduction to take place under undrained conditions. This makes ash layers mechanically distinct within slope sediment sequences. Here we propose a mechanism by which ash layers may become weak planes that promote translational sliding. The mechanism implies that ground shaking by large earthquakes induces rearrangement of ash shards causing their compaction (volume reduction) and produces a rapid accumulation of water in the upper part of the layer that is capped by impermeable clay. The water-rich veneer abruptly reduces shear strength, creating a detachment plane for translational sliding. Tephra layers might act as slide detachment planes at convergent margins of subducting zones, at submarine slopes of volcanic islands, and at submerged volcano slopes in lakes.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 18 , Ill., graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1525-2027
    Language: English
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  • 2
    In: Chemical geology, Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 1966, 249(2008), 3/4, Seite 321-338, 0009-2541
    In: volume:249
    In: year:2008
    In: number:3/4
    In: pages:321-338
    Description / Table of Contents: Four volcanic ash-bearing marine sediment cores and one ash-free reference core were examined during research cruise RV Meteor 54/2 offshore Nicaragua and Costa Rica to investigate the chemical composition of pore waters related to volcanic ash alteration. Sediments were composed of terrigenous matter derived from the adjacent continent and contained several distinct ash layers. Biogenic opal and carbonate were only minor components. The terrigenous fraction was mainly composed of smectite and other clay minerals while the pore water composition was strongly affected by the anaerobic degradation of particulate organic matter via microbial sulphate reduction. The alteration of volcanic matter showed only a minor effect on major element concentrations in pore waters. This is in contrast to prior studies based on long sediment cores taken during the DSDP, where deep sediments always showed distinct signs of volcanic ash alteration. The missing signal of ash alteration is probably caused by low reaction rates and the high background concentration of major dissolved ions in the seawater-derived pore fluids. Dissolved silica concentrations were, however, significantly enriched in ash-bearing cores and showed no relation to the low but variable contents of biogenic opal. Hence, the data suggest that silica concentrations were enhanced by ash dissolution. Thus, the dissolved silica profile measured in one of the sediment cores was used to derive the in-situ dissolution rate of volcanic glass particles in marine sediments. A non-steady state model was run over a period of 43 kyr applying a constant pH of 7.30 and a dissolved Al concentration of 0.05 myM. The kinetic constant (AA) was varied systematically to fit the model to the measured dissolved silica-depth profile. The best fit to the data was obtained applying AA = 1.3 × 10-U9 mol of Si cm- 2 s- 1. This in-situ rate of ash dissolution at the seafloor is three orders of magnitude smaller than the rate of ash dissolution determined in previous laboratory experiments. Our results therefore imply that field investigations are necessary to accurately predict natural dissolution rates of volcanic glasses in marine sediments.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0009-2541
    Language: English
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  • 3
    In: International journal of earth sciences, Berlin : Springer, 1999, (2009), 1437-3262
    In: year:2009
    In: extent:18
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 18 , Ill., graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Language: English
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  • 4
    In: International journal of earth sciences, Berlin : Springer, 1999, (2009), 1437-3262
    In: year:2009
    In: extent:14
    Description / Table of Contents: We analyzed bare human footprints in Holocene tuff preserved in two pits in the Acahualinca barrio in the northern outskirts of Managua (Nicaragua). Lithology, volcanology, and age of the deposits are discussed in a companion paper (Schmincke et al. Bull Volcanol doi: 10.1007/s00445-008-0235-9, 2008). The footprint layer occurs within a series of rapidly accumulated basalticandesitic tephra that is regionally correlated to the Masaya Triple Layer Tephra. The people were probably trying to escape from a powerful volcanic eruption at Masaya Caldera 20 km farther south that occurred at 2.1 ka BP. We subdivided the swath of footprints, up to 5.6 m wide, in the northern pit (Pit I) into (1) a central group of footprints made by about six individuals, the total number being difficult to determine because people walked in each other’s footsteps one behind the other and (2) two marginal groups on either side of the central group with more widely spaced tracks. The western band comprises tracks of three adjacent individuals and an isolated single footprint farther out. The eastern marginal area comprises an inner band of deep footprints made by three individuals and, farther out, three clearly separated individuals. We estimate the total number of people as 15-16. In the southern narrow and smaller pit (Pit II), we recognize tracks of ca. 12 individuals, no doubt made by the same group. The group represented in both pits probably comprised male and female adults, teenagers and children based on differences in length of footprints and of strides and depth of footprints made in the soft wet ash. The smallest footprints (probably made by children) occur in the central group, where protection was most effective. The footprint layer is composed of a lower 5-15-cm thick, coarse-grained vesicle tuff capped by a medium to fine-grained tuff up to 3 cm thick. The surface on which the people walked was muddy, and the soft ash was squeezed up on the sides of the foot imprints and between toes. Especially, deep footprints are mainly due to local thickening of the water-rich ash, multiple track use, and differences in weight of individuals. The excellent preservation of the footprints, ubiquitous mudcracks, sharp and well-preserved squeeze-ups along the margins of the tracks and toe imprints, and the absence of raindrop impressions all suggest that the eruption occurred during the dry season. The people walked at a brisk pace, as judged from the tight orientation of the swath and the length of the strides. The directions of a major erosional channel in the overlying deposits that probably debouched into Lake Managua and the band of footprints are strictly parallel, indicating that people walked together in stride along the eastern margin of a channel straight toward the lake shore, possibly a site with huts and/or boats for protection and/or escape.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 14 , Ill., graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Language: English
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  • 5
    In: Sedimentary geology, Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 1967, 203(2008), 3/4, Seite 246-266, 0037-0738
    In: volume:203
    In: year:2008
    In: number:3/4
    In: pages:246-266
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    ISSN: 0037-0738
    Language: English
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  • 6
    In: Bulletin of volcanology, Berlin : Springer, 1986, 71(2009), 5, Seite 479-493, 1432-0819
    In: volume:71
    In: year:2009
    In: number:5
    In: pages:479-493
    Description / Table of Contents: We present the stratigraphy, lithology, volcanology, and age of the Acahualinca section in Managua, including a famous footprint layer exposed in two museum pits. The ca. 4-m-high walls of the main northern pit (Pit I) expose excellent cross sections of Late Holocene volcaniclastic deposits in northern Managua. We have subdivided the section into six lithostratigraphic units, some of which we correlate to Late Holocene eruptions. Unit I (1.2 m thick), chiefly of hydroclastic origin, begins with the footprint layer. The bulk is dominated by mostly massive basaltic-andesitic tephra layers, interpreted to represent separate pulses of a basically phreatomagmatic eruptive episode. We correlate these deposits based on compositional and stratigraphic evidence to the Masaya Triple Layer erupted at Masaya volcano ca. 2,120 ± 120 a B.P.. The eruption occurred during the dry season. A major erosional channel unconformity up to 1 m deep in the western half of Pit I separates Units II and I. Unit II begins with basal dacitic pumice lapilli up to 10 cm thick overlain by a massive to bedded fine-grained dacitic tuff including a layer of accretionary lapilli and pockets of well-rounded pumice lapilli. Angular nonvesicular glass shards are interpreted to represent hydroclastic fragmentation. The dacitic tephra is correlated unequivocally with the ca. 1.9-ka-Plinian dacitic Chiltepe eruption. Unit III, a lithified basaltic-andesitic deposit up to 50 cm thick and extremely rich in branch molds and excellent leaf impressions, is correlated with the Masaya Tuff erupted ca. 1.8 ka ago. Unit IV, a reworked massive basaltic-andesitic deposit, rich in brown tuff clasts and well bedded and cross bedded in the northwestern corner of Pit I, cuts erosionally down as far as Unit I. A poorly defined, pale brown mass flow deposit up to 1 m thick (Unit V) is overlain by 1-1.5 m of dominantly reworked, chiefly basaltic tephra topped by soil (Unit VI). A major erosional channel carved chiefly between deposition of Units II and I may have existed as a shallow drainage channel even prior to deposition of the footprint layer. The swath of the footprints is oriented NNW, roughly parallel to, and just east of, the axis of the channel. The interpretation of the footprint layer as the initial product of a powerful eruption at Masaya volcano followed without erosional breaks by additional layers of the same eruptive phase is strong evidence that the group of 15 or 16 people tried to escape from an eruption.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: Ill., graph. Darst
    ISSN: 1432-0819
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Keywords: Calcium carbonate; Carbon, organic, total; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Element analyser CHN, Carlo Erba; GC_T; Gravity Corer/temperature probe; M54/2; M54/2_2; Meteor (1986); Nitrogen, total; Opal, biogenic silica; Sequential leaching technique; SFB574; Sulfur, total; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones; Water content, wet mass
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 136 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Keywords: Age model; Age model, optional; Ash, volcanic; Ash, volcanic, altered; Ash, volcanic, felsic; Ash, volcanic, fresh; Ash, volcanic, mafic; Comment; Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Depth, top/min; Event label; GC_T; Gravity Corer/temperature probe; M54/2; M54/2_11-2; M54/2_13; M54/2_2; Meteor (1986); PC; Piston corer; Sedimentation rate per year; Sediments; SFB574; Silicon dioxide; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 299 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Keywords: AGE; Age, error; Date/Time of event; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Event label; GC; Gravity corer; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; M54/2; M54/2_92; Meteor (1986); Mound 10; Name; Sample code/label; Sample type; SFB574; SO173/3; SO173/3_40; Sonne; SUBDUCTION II; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones; δ13C; δ13C, standard deviation
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 34 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Keywords: Calcium carbonate; Carbon, organic, total; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Element analyser CHN, Carlo Erba; GC; Gravity corer; M54/2; M54/2_81-1; Meteor (1986); Nitrogen, total; Opal, biogenic silica; Sequential leaching technique; SFB574; Sulfur, total; Volatiles and Fluids in Subduction Zones; Water content, wet mass
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 95 data points
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