Kutterolf, Steffen et al. (2012): A detection of Milankovitch frequencies in global volcanic activity

Leg/Site/Hole:
Identifier:
2013-010738
georefid

10.1130/G33419.1
doi

Creator:
Kutterolf, Steffen
Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research, Collaborative Research Center, Kiel, Germany
author

Jegen, Marion
Harvard University, United States
author

Mitrovica, Jerry X.
author

Kwasnitschka, Tom
author

Freundt, Armin
author

Huybers, Peter J.
author

Identification:
A detection of Milankovitch frequencies in global volcanic activity
2012
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
41
2
227-230
A rigorous detection of Milankovitch periodicities in volcanic output across the Pleistocene-Holocene ice age has remained elusive. We report on a spectral analysis of a large number of well-preserved ash plume deposits recorded in marine sediments along the Pacific Ring of Fire. Our analysis yields a statistically significant detection of a spectral peak at the obliquity period. We propose that this variability in volcanic activity results from crustal stress changes associated with ice age mass redistribution. In particular, increased volcanism lags behind the highest rate of increasing eustatic sea level (decreasing global ice volume) by 4.0 + or - 3.6 k.y. and correlates with numerical predictions of stress changes at volcanically active sites. These results support the presence of a causal link between variations in ice age climate, continental stress field, and volcanism.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:18.3000
West:-92.1500East: -77.1000
South:7.1000

Quaternary geology; Cenozoic; Central America; chemostratigraphy; Circum-Pacific region; cores; crust; cycles; Deep Sea Drilling Project; Fourier analysis; frequency; Holocene; ice; Integrated Ocean Drilling Program; isotope ratios; isotopes; lower Holocene; marine sediments; Milankovitch theory; O-18/O-16; obliquity of the ecliptic; Ocean Drilling Program; oxygen; Pacific region; Pleistocene; Quaternary; sea-level changes; sediments; spectra; stable isotopes; statistical analysis; stress; tephrostratigraphy; time series analysis; upper Pleistocene;

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