Tephra layers are assuming an increasingly important role in the dating and correlation of Late Quaternary marine sequences. Here we demonstrate their potential by reporting a new study of the sediment sequence of marine core SA03-11, recovered from the Southern Adriatic Sea, which spans the last c. 39 ka. A total of 28 discrete tephra layers are reported from this sequence, 10 of which are visible in the core and a further 18 are non-visible cryptotephra layers. These have been analysed using more than 1400 WDS-EPMA measurements of glass chemistry and results have been compared with published chemical measurements obtained from relevant proximal and distal sites which preserve eruptive material dating to within the same time interval. The ...
International audienceThirty-two tephra layers were identified in the time-interval 313–366 ka (Mari...
International audienceA detailed tephrostratigraphic study supported by stable isotope (δ18O) analys...
The first part of this paper presents a review of the problems that constrain the reliability of rad...
Tephra layers are assuming an increasingly important role in the dating and correlation of Late Quat...
Magnetic susceptibility curves of ten cores, collected in the western Adriatic shelf and in the Mid-...
Core PRAD 1-2, located on the western flank of the Mid-Adriatic Deep, was investigated for tephra co...
A tephrochronological investigation was carried out at site ND14Q (1013 m of water depth), located i...
A tephrochronological investigation was carried out at site ND14Q (1013 m of water depth), located i...
Five cores from the southern Tyrrhenian and Ionian seas were studied for their tephra and cryptoteph...
Isochronous tephra layers provide the potential for the precise correlation of environmental records...
Revision of the tephrostratigraphy previously proposed for the marine core AD91-17 (Adriatic Sea), s...
Terrestrial archives from the Mediterranean have been crucial to expanding our understanding of past...
Terrestrial archives from the Mediterranean have been crucial to expanding our understanding of past...
International audienceThirty-two tephra layers were identified in the time-interval 313–366 ka (Mari...
International audienceA detailed tephrostratigraphic study supported by stable isotope (δ18O) analys...
The first part of this paper presents a review of the problems that constrain the reliability of rad...
Tephra layers are assuming an increasingly important role in the dating and correlation of Late Quat...
Magnetic susceptibility curves of ten cores, collected in the western Adriatic shelf and in the Mid-...
Core PRAD 1-2, located on the western flank of the Mid-Adriatic Deep, was investigated for tephra co...
A tephrochronological investigation was carried out at site ND14Q (1013 m of water depth), located i...
A tephrochronological investigation was carried out at site ND14Q (1013 m of water depth), located i...
Five cores from the southern Tyrrhenian and Ionian seas were studied for their tephra and cryptoteph...
Isochronous tephra layers provide the potential for the precise correlation of environmental records...
Revision of the tephrostratigraphy previously proposed for the marine core AD91-17 (Adriatic Sea), s...
Terrestrial archives from the Mediterranean have been crucial to expanding our understanding of past...
Terrestrial archives from the Mediterranean have been crucial to expanding our understanding of past...
International audienceThirty-two tephra layers were identified in the time-interval 313–366 ka (Mari...
International audienceA detailed tephrostratigraphic study supported by stable isotope (δ18O) analys...
The first part of this paper presents a review of the problems that constrain the reliability of rad...