Artículos de revistas
Stratigraphy, age and correlation of Lepue Tephra: a widespread c. 11 000 cal a BP marker horizon sourced from the Chaitén sector of southern Chile
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Journal of Quaternary Science, 32 (6): 795-829
10.1002/jqs.2976
Autor
Alloway, Brent V.
Moreno Moncada, Patricio
Pearce, Nick J. G.
De Pol-Holz, Ricardo
Henríquez, William I.
Pesce, Oscar H.
Sagredo, Esteban
Villarosa, Gustavo
Outes, Valeria
Institución
Resumen
We describe the stratigraphy, age and correlation of a prominent tephra marker, named Lepue Tephra, extensively distributed in north-western Patagonia. Lepue Tephra is well dated at c. 11 000 cal a BP from numerous lake and soil cover-bed sequences and its recognition is useful for assessing the rate and timing of deglaciation as well as associated environmental changes in this region during the last glacial termination and early Holocene. Lepue Tephra has attributes typical of a complex and compositionally zoned phreatomagmatic eruptive. While the initial rhyolitic phase can be readily distinguished from multiple eruptive products sourced from the adjacent Volcan Chaiten, the main erupted end member is of basaltic-andesitic bulk composition-similar to younger tephras sourced from Holocene monogenetic cones adjacent to the Volcan Michimahuida massif (tMim). Lepue Tephra can be correlated to an equivalent-aged pyroclastic flow deposit (Amarillo Ignimbrite) prominently distributed in the south-eastern sector of tMim. The source vent for these co-eruptive events is obscured by an extensive ice field and is currently unknown. The widespread radially symmetrical distribution of Lepue Tephra centred on tMim cannot be attributed solely to volcanological considerations. Reduced Southern Hemisphere westerly wind influence interpreted from climate proxies at the time of eruption are also implicated.