Lee, Meng-Yang et al. (2004): First Toba supereruption revival

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 121
ODP 184
ODP 184 1143
ODP 121 758
Identifier:
2004-014676
georefid

10.1130/G19903.1
doi

Creator:
Lee, Meng-Yang
Academia Sinica, Institute of Earth Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan
author

Chen, Chang-Hwa
National Taiwan University, Taiwan
author

Wei, Kuo-Yen
University of Rhode Island, United States
author

Iizuka, Yoshiyuki
author

Carey, Steven
author

Identification:
First Toba supereruption revival
2004
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
32
1
61-64
Little has been known about the earliest Toba eruptive episodes that created the largest-known caldera complex of Quaternary age. Here we report evidence for the eastward dispersal of the oldest Toba tuff in South China Sea sediments to 2500 km away from the source. The tephra deposits occur below the Brunhes-Matuyama geomagnetic boundary (778 ka) and slightly above the Australasian microtektite layer (793 ka). Calibrated by astronomically tuned oxygen isotope stratigraphy, the middle Pleistocene Toba eruption occurred during the deglaciation at 788+ or -2.2 ka, according to the tephra occurrence between marine isotope stages 20 and 19. This refined age is in good agreement with the (super 40) Ar/ (super 39) Ar date of 800+ or -20 ka for the Toba tephra (layer D) from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 758, but significantly younger than the commonly cited Ar/Ar age of 840+ or -30 ka. The eruption expelled at least 800-1000 km (super 3) dense-rock-equivalent of rhyolitic magma on the basis of the widespread tephra-fall deposit in the basins of the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea. In spite of its exceptional magnitude, the timing of this major eruption does not indicate a causal linkage between this event and a long-term global climatic deterioration.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:12.0000
West:90.2140East: 120.0000
South:2.2000

Quaternary geology; absolute age; Ar/Ar; ash falls; Asia; Brunhes Chron; calibration; Cenozoic; climate change; dates; electron probe data; eruptions; experimental studies; explosive eruptions; Far East; Indonesia; Leg 121; Leg 184; magmas; major elements; marine sediments; Matuyama Chron; microtektites; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1143; ODP Site 758; Pacific Ocean; paleomagnetism; Quaternary; sediments; South China Sea; Sumatra; tektites; tephrochronology; Toba Lake; upper Cenozoic; upper Quaternary; volcanic ash; volcaniclastics; volcanoes; West Pacific;

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