4.2 Article

Linking the North Atlantic to central Europe: a high-resolution Holocene tephrochronological record from northern Germany

Journal

JOURNAL OF QUATERNARY SCIENCE
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 3-20

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/jqs.636

Keywords

tephrochronology; Holocene; northern Germany; Iceland; Hekla

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A high-resolution Holocene tephrochronology for northern Germany has been established based on systematic tephrostratigraphical analysis of three peat bogs. Microscopic volcanic ash layers have been traced and characterised petrographically and by the chemical composition of the glass shards. At least 37 ash horizons representing 16 different explosive volcanic eruptions have been identified and many can be correlated between the three sites, up to 100 km apart. The tephra layers can be related to Icelandic volcanic sources and some correlated to the eruptions of Askja 1875, Hekla 3, Hekla Selsund, Hekla 4 and Hekla 5, as well as to unspecified eruptions of Icelandic volcanic systems, e.g. Torfajokull. The source volcanoes for some tephra layers remain unidentified. Some tephra layers were known previously from the North Atlantic region (e.g. Sluggan, Glen Garry), others have not been recorded previously in the literature (e.g. microlite tephra). This study provides the first comprehensive Holocene tephrostratigraphical record for northern Germany, complementing the North Atlantic tephrostratigraphical dating framework, effectively extending it into central Europe. The study shows that Icelandic ash layers are even more widespread than hitherto thought. (C) Copyright 2002 John Wiley Sons, Ltd.

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