Buehring, Christian and Sarnthein, Michael (2000): Toba ash layers in the South China Sea; evidence of contrasting wind directions during eruption ca. 74 ka

Leg/Site/Hole:
Identifier:
2000-021947
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(2000)028<0275:TALITS>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Buehring, Christian
Universitaet Kiel, Institut fuer Geowissenschaften, Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Sarnthein, Michael
author

Identification:
Toba ash layers in the South China Sea; evidence of contrasting wind directions during eruption ca. 74 ka
2000
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
28
3
275-278
Two cores from the southern South China Sea contain discrete ash layers that mainly consist of rhyolithic glass shards. On the basis of the SPECMAP time scale, the ash layers were dated to ca. 74 ka, the age of the youngest Toba eruption in northern Sumatra. This link is supported by the chemical composition of the glass, which is distinct from volcanic glass supplied from the Philippines and the northern South China Sea, but is almost identical with the chemistry of the Toba ash. The youngest Toba ash layers in the South China Sea expand the previously known ash-fall zone over more than 1800 km to the east. The dispersal of ashes from Sumatra in both western and eastern directions indicates two contrasting wind directions and suggests that (1) the Toba eruption probably happened during the Southeast Asian summer monsoon season, and (2) the volume of erupted magma was larger than previously interpreted.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:8.3024
West:112.0454East: 112.1954
South:7.1054

Quaternary geology; ash falls; Asia; Cenozoic; cores; eruptions; Far East; glasses; igneous rocks; Indonesia; marine sediments; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; Pleistocene; provenance; Quaternary; sediment transport; sediments; South China Sea; Sumatra; tephrochronology; Toba Lake; upper Pleistocene; volcanic ash; volcanic glass; volcanic rocks; volcaniclastics; volcanism; West Pacific; wind transport;

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