Carey, Steven N. and Sigurdsson, Haraldur (2000): Grain size of Miocene volcanic ash layers from sites 998, 999, and 1000; implications for source areas and dispersal

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 165
ODP 165 1000
ODP 165 998
ODP 165 999
Identifier:
2000-062883
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.165.002.2000
doi

Creator:
Carey, Steven N.
University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI, United States
author

Sigurdsson, Haraldur
University of Rhode Island, United States
author

Identification:
Grain size of Miocene volcanic ash layers from sites 998, 999, and 1000; implications for source areas and dispersal
2000
In: Leckie, R. Mark, Sigurdsson, Haraldur, Acton, Gary D., Abrams, Lewis J., Bralower, Timothy J., Carey, Steven N., Chaisson, William P., Cotillon, Pierre, Cunningham, Andrew D., D'Hondt, Steven L., Droxler, Andre W., Galbrun, Bruno, Gonzalez, Juan, Haug, Gerald H., Kameo, Koji, King, John W., Lind, Ida L., Louvel, Veronique, Lyons, Timothy W., Murray, Richard W., Mutti, Maria, Myers, Greg, Pearce, Richard B., Pearson, D. Graham, Peterson, Larry C., Roehl, Ursula, Garman, Phyllis (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, scientific results, Caribbean Ocean history and the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary event; covering Leg 165 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution, Miami, Florida, to San Juan Puerto Rico, sites 998-1002, 19 December 1995-17 February 1996
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
165
101-113
Crystal size measurements have been carried out on tephra fall layers of Miocene to Holocene age from Sites 998, 999, and 1000 in the western Caribbean Sea. Maximum crystal size is used as a proxy for the grain-size characteristics of the layers and an index of atmospheric dispersal from source eruptions. Crystal sizes range from 50 to 650 mu m with the majority falling between 200 and 300 mu m. All three sites exhibit a coarsening in the grain size of tephra layers with increasing age to the early Miocene that broadly correlates with an increase in the frequency of layers. Analysis of the present lower and upper level atmospheric circulation in the western Caribbean suggests that the layers were derived from source eruptions to the west of the sites somewhere in the Central American region. Minimum distances to these sources are on the order of 700 km. Crystal sizes in tephra layers at these distances are consistent with their derivation from energetic pyroclastic flow-forming eruptions that ejected tephra to stratospheric levels by large-scale ignimbrite- and Plinian-style plumes. Coarsening of the layers during the Miocene peak of explosive volcanism cannot be attributed to any major change in paleowind intensity and is taken to represent the occurrence of more energetic eruptions that were able to disperse tephra over larger areas.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:19.2923
West:-82.5610East: -78.4422
South:12.4437

Stratigraphy; ash falls; Atlantic Ocean; atmospheric transport; Caribbean Sea; Cenozoic; depositional environment; eruptions; grain size; Leg 165; lithostratigraphy; marine sediments; Miocene; Neogene; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1000; ODP Site 998; ODP Site 999; provenance; Quaternary; sedimentation; sedimentation rates; sediments; size distribution; Tertiary; volcanic ash; volcaniclastics; volcanism;

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