학술논문

The use of magnetic separation techniques to detect basaltic microtephra in last glacial-interglacial transition (L.G.I.T.; 15-10 ka cal. BP) sediment sequences in Scotland
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Scottish Journal of Geology. 38:21-30
Subject
24|Quaternary geology
03|Geochronology
basaltic composition
Cenozoic
eruptions
Europe
experimental studies
glacial environment
Great Britain
Holocene
igneous rocks
interglacial environment
key beds
laboratory studies
lithostratigraphy
lower Holocene
magnetic minerals
marker beds
Pleistocene
pyroclastics
Quaternary
sample preparation
Scotland
sediments
separation
techniques
tephrochronology
United Kingdom
upper Pleistocene
upper Weichselian
Vedde Ash
volcanic ash
volcanic rocks
volcanism
Weichselian
Western Europe
Younger Dryas
Language
English
ISSN
0036-9276
Abstract
Basaltic tephra horizons dominate the Icelandic tephrochronological framework during the last glacial-interglacial transition (LGIT; 15-10 ka cal. BP), providing excellent potential for high precision correlation of paleoclimate data-sets as recorded in ice, marine and terrestrial sequences of the North Atlantic region. Although significant advances have been made in identifying and extending the known provenance of rhyolitic tephras (in the form of microtephra horizons), the detection of basaltic layers has proved problematic. The bimodal Vedde Ash is an important chronological marker horizon that lies firmly within the GS-1/Younger Dryas chronozone (ca. 10.3 ka 14C BP; 12.0 ka GRIP ice-core yrs) and provides an excellent opportunity to develop methodologies for extracting both rhyolitic and basaltic ash. The recent identification of the rhyolitic component across Europe using flotation techniques has significantly extended the known provenance of this eruption event. However, there is no routine methodology for the identification of basaltic microtephra horizons and the separation of this component of the Vedde Ash has therefore been limited to visible horizons in Iceland, western Norway and the Isle of Skye. Here, we use magnetic separation techniques to identify for the first time basaltic Vedde Ash as a microtephra horizon in minerogenic sequences from two sites in western Scotland.