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Late Quaternary distal tephra-fall deposits in lacustrine sediments, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska

January 1, 2007

Tephra-fall deposits from Cook Inlet volcanoes were detected in sediment cores from Tustumena and Paradox Lakes, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska, using magnetic susceptibility and petrography. The ages of tephra layers were estimated using 21 14C ages on macrofossils. Tephras layers are typically fine, gray ash, 1–5 mm thick, and composed of varying proportions of glass shards, pumice, and glass-coated phenocrysts. Of the two lakes, Paradox Lake contained a higher frequency of tephra (0.8 tephra/100 yr; 109 over the 13,200-yr record). The unusually large number of tephra in this lake relative to others previously studied in the area is attributed to the lake's physiography, sedimentology, and limnology. The frequency of ash fall was not constant through the Holocene. In Paradox Lake, tephra layers are absent between ca. 800–2200, 3800–4800, and 9000–10,300 cal yr BP, despite continuously layered lacustrine sediment. In contrast, between 5000 and 9000 cal yr BP, an average of 1.7 tephra layers are present per 100 yr. The peak period of tephra fall (7000–9000 cal yr BP; 2.6 tephra/100 yr) in Paradox Lake is consistent with the increase in volcanism between 7000 and 9000 yr ago recorded in the Greenland ice cores.

Publication Year 2007
Title Late Quaternary distal tephra-fall deposits in lacustrine sediments, Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
DOI 10.1016/j.yqres.2007.03.006
Authors C.S. de Fontaine, D. S. Kaufman, Anderson R. Scott, A. Werner, Christopher F. Waythomas, T.A. Brown
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Quaternary Research
Index ID 70031189
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Volcano Hazards Program
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