No evidence for tephra in Greenland from the historic eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE: implications for geochronology and paleoclimatology
-
Published:2022-01-18
Issue:1
Volume:18
Page:45-65
-
ISSN:1814-9332
-
Container-title:Climate of the Past
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Clim. Past
Author:
Plunkett GillORCID, Sigl MichaelORCID, Schwaiger Hans F., Tomlinson Emma L., Toohey MatthewORCID, McConnell Joseph R.ORCID, Pilcher Jonathan R., Hasegawa Takeshi, Siebe Claus
Abstract
Abstract. Volcanic fallout in polar ice sheets provides important opportunities to date and correlate ice-core records as well as to investigate the
environmental impacts of eruptions. Only the geochemical characterization of volcanic ash (tephra) embedded in the ice strata can confirm the source
of the eruption, however, and is a requisite if historical eruption ages are to be used as valid chronological checks on annual ice layer
counting. Here we report the investigation of ash particles in a Greenland ice core that are associated with a volcanic sulfuric acid layer previously
attributed to the 79 CE eruption of Vesuvius. Major and trace element composition of the particles indicates that the tephra does not derive from
Vesuvius but most likely originates from an unidentified eruption in the Aleutian arc. Using ash dispersal modeling, we find that only an eruption
large enough to include stratospheric injection is likely to account for the sizable (24–85 µm) ash particles observed in the Greenland
ice at this time. Despite its likely explosivity, this event does not appear to have triggered significant climate perturbations, unlike some other
large extratropical eruptions. In light of a recent re-evaluation of the Greenland ice-core chronologies, our findings further challenge the previous
assignation of this volcanic event to 79 CE. We highlight the need for the revised Common Era ice-core chronology to be formally accepted by the wider
ice-core and climate modeling communities in order to ensure robust age linkages to precisely dated historical and paleoclimate proxy records.
Funder
National Science Foundation European Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Global and Planetary Change
Reference137 articles.
1. Abbott, P. M., Plunkett, G., Corona, C., Chellman, N. J., McConnell, J. R., Pilcher, J. R., Stoffel, M., and Sigl, M.: Cryptotephra from the Icelandic Veiðivötn 1477 CE eruption in a Greenland ice core: confirming the dating of volcanic events in the 1450s CE and assessing the eruption's climatic impact, Clim. Past, 17, 565–585, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-17-565-2021, 2021. 2. Abram, N. J., McGregor, H. V., Tierney, J. E., Evans, M. N., McKay, N. P., Kaufman, D. S., and PAGES 2k Consortium:
Early onset of industrial-era warming across the oceans and continents,
Nature,
536, 411–418, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature19082, 2016. 3. Adolphi, F. and Muscheler, R.: Synchronizing the Greenland ice core and radiocarbon timescales over the Holocene – Bayesian wiggle-matching of cosmogenic radionuclide records, Clim. Past, 12, 15–30, https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-12-15-2016, 2016. 4. Albert, P. G., Smith, V. C., Suzuki, T., McLean, D., Tomlinson, E. L., Miyabuchi, Y., Kitaba, I., Mark, D. F., Moriwaki, H., Members, S. P., and Nakagawa, T.:
Geochemical characterisation of the Late Quaternary widespread Japanese tephrostratigraphic markers and correlations to the Lake Suigetsu sedimentary archive (SG06 core),
Quat. Geochronol.,
52, 103–131, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quageo.2019.01.005, 2019. 5. Andreastuti, S. D.:
Stratigraphy and geochemistry of Merapi Volcano, Central Java, Indonesia: implication for assessment of volcanic hazards,
PhD thesis,
University of Auckland, Auckland, 1999.
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|