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Source of Ash Zone 1 in the North Atlantic
Authors:C Lacasse  H Sigurdsson  H Jóhannesson  M Paterne  S Carey
Institution:(1) Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, 02882 Narragansett, RI, USA;(2) Museum of Natural History, Reykjavík, Iceland;(3) Centre des Faibles Radioactivités, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Abstract:Geochemical evidence shows that the silicic component of the widespread Ash Zone 1 in the North Atlantic is derived from a major ignimbrite-forming eruption which occurred at the Katla caldera in southern Iceland during the transition from glacial to interglacial conditions in Younger Dryas time. Both trace and major element evidence of the rhyolitic products excludes the Öræfajökull volcano as a source. The high-Ti basaltic component in the marine ash zone can also be attributed to contemporaneous eruption in the Katla volcanic complex. Dispersal of tephra from this event is primarily attributed to the generation of co-ignimbrite ash columns in the atmosphere, with ash fallout on both sea ice and on the ocean floor north and east of Iceland. Owing to the changing ocean circulation characteristics of the glacial regime, including suppression of the Irminger Current and a stronger North Atlantic Current, tephra was rafted on sea ice south into the central North Atlantic and deposited as dispersed Ash Zone 1. Sediments south of Iceland also show evidence of the formation of ash turbidites, generated either by the entrance of pyroclastic flows into the sea, or during discharge of jökulhlaups or glacier bursts from this subglacial eruption.
Keywords:Ash Zone 1  Katla volcano    lheimar ignimbrite  Co-ignimbrite ash  Volcaniclastic turbidites  Pyroclastic flows    kulhlaup
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