An 18,000 year-long eruptive record from Volcán Chaitén, northwestern Patagonia: Paleoenvironmental and hazard-assessment implications
Author
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Alloway, Brent V.
Author
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Pearce, Nick J.G.
Author
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Moreno Moncada, Patricio
Author
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Villarosa, Gustavo
Author
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Jara, Ignacio
Author
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Pol Holz, Ricardo de
Author
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Outes, Valeria
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2018-05-22T14:43:11Z
Available date
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2018-05-22T14:43:11Z
Publication date
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2017
Cita de ítem
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Quaternary Science Reviews 168 (2017): 151-181
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1016/j.quascirev.2017.05.011
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/147981
Abstract
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The 2008 eruption of Volc an Chait en (VCha) in northwestern Patagonia was the first explosive rhyolitic
eruption to have occurred within a century and provided an unprecedented scientific opportunity to
examine all facets of the eruption ranging from magma rheology/ascent rates to ash-fall effects on biota
and infrastructure. Up to very recently it was thought that the latest eruption prior to the 2008 event
occurred c. 9750 cal. a BP. Although a number of researchers have recognised additional eruptive
products, but their stratigraphy, age, and geochemical attributes have not been systematically described
and/or recorded. In this study, we provide a detailed examination of andic cover-beds and tephra-bearing
lake sequences located both proximally and distally to VCha, which record a series of hitherto unknown
rhyolitic eruptive products and place all previous observations firmly within a coherent stratigraphic
framework. Through major- and trace-element glass shard geochemistry we are able to confidently
verify eruptive source. A total of 20 discrete tephra beds are recognised, with at least 10 having widespread
areal distributions and/or depositional imprints broadly comparable to, or greater than, the 2008-
tephra event. This record indicates that VCha has been continuously but intermittently active as far back
as the end of the Last Glacial Maximum (c. 18,000 cal a BP) with two dominant, genetically related
magma types and an intermediary ‘mixed’ type. Before this the eruptive record has been largely obscured
and/or erased by widespread Andean piedmont glaciation. However, based on the tempo of VCha activity
over the last c. 18,000 years, older VCha eruptives can be anticipated to occur as well as future hazardous
explosive events. The new eruptive inventory will ultimately be useful for correlating equivalent-aged
sequences and refining long-term eruptive tempo as well as corresponding temporal changes in
magmatic evolution.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
Iniciativa Cientifica Milenio, P02-51, NC120066 /
Fondecyt, 1151469 /
Victoria University of Wellington Science Faculty Research Grant /
Aberystwyth University Research Fund / PIP CONICET, 2011 0311