Title of article :
Correlation of Indian Ocean tephra to individual Oligocene silicic eruptions from Afro-Arabian flood volcanism
Author/Authors :
Ukstins Peate، نويسنده , , Ingrid and Baker، نويسنده , , Joel A. and Kent، نويسنده , , Adam J.R. and Al-Kadasi، نويسنده , , Mohamed and Al-Subbary، نويسنده , , Abdulkarim and Ayalew، نويسنده , , Dereje and Menzies، نويسنده , , Martin، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
17
From page :
311
To page :
327
Abstract :
Widespread silicic pyroclastic eruptions of the Oligocene Afro-Arabian flood volcanic province (ignimbrites and airfall tuffs) produced up to 20% of the total flood volcanic stratigraphy (>6×104 km3). Volumes of individual ignimbrites and tuffs exposed on land range from ∼150 to >2000 km3 and eight major units (15–100 m thick) were erupted in <2 Myr, placing these amongst the largest-magnitude silicic pyroclastic eruptions on Earth. They are compositionally distinctive time-stratigraphic markers which were deposited as co-ignimbrite ashfall deposits on a near-global scale around the time of the Oi2 cooling anomaly at ∼30 Ma. Two ignimbrites from the lower part of the flood volcanic succession in Yemen have been correlated to: (a) the conjugate rifted margin of Ethiopia (>500 km distant); and (b) to two deep sea ash layers sampled by ODP Leg 115 in the Indian Ocean ∼2700 km to the southeast. This correlation is based on whole rock analyses of silicic units for isotope ratios (Pb, Nd) and rare earth element compositions, in conjunction with novel in situ Pb isotope laser ablation multicollector inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy analysis of groundmass and glass shards. Compositional diversity preserved on the scale of individual ash shards in these deep sea tephra layers record chemical heterogeneity present in the silicic magma chambers that is not evident in the welded on-land deposits. Ages of the ash layers can be established by correlation to precisely dated on-land ignimbrites, and current evidence suggests that while these eruptions may have exacerbated already changing climatic conditions, they both marginally post-date the Oi2 global cooling anomaly.
Keywords :
Ethiopia , Silicic volcanism , in situ Pb isotope laser ablation , TEPHROCHRONOLOGY , Flood volcanism , Yemen , Indian Ocean , Ignimbrite
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number :
2322877
Link To Document :
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