Four primary glass populations, well defined by their Sr, Ba and Y concentrations, occur in the Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT), which was deposited during a supereruption of the Toba caldera complex in northern Sumatra 75 ka. Average concentrations of major and trace elements indicate a coherent, systematic variation of glass composition across populations. No clear pattern in the areal distribution of these four glass groups can be discerned. The multiple glass populations of the YTT easily distinguish it from the single homogeneous glass population of the Middle Toba Tuff (approximate to 500 ka), as represented by its basal vitrophyre, and that of the Oldest Toba Tuff (approximate to 800 ka), as represented by ash Layer D at the Ocean Drilling ...
A dispersed volcanic ash layer was recovered at similar to 300 cm depth in a 5.52 m long sediment co...
International audienceThe Indonesian Young Toba Tuff (YTT), classically dated around 74 ka BP, is co...
A controversy currently exists regarding the number of Toba eruptive events represented in the tephr...
Four primary glass populations, well defined by their Sr, Ba and Y concentrations, occur in the Youn...
Four primary glass populations, well defined by their Sr, Ba and Y concentrations, occur in the Youn...
Uncertainty over the identity and age of Toba tephras across peninsular India persists, with radiome...
Uncertainty over the identity and age of Toba tephras across peninsular India persists, with radiome...
Volcanic glasses with minor mafic mineral fragments, such as biotite and hornblende, found in deep-s...
Determination of the area density of spontaneous fission tracks (ρs) in glass shards of Toba tephra ...
The Youngest Toba Tuff contains five distinct glass populations, identified from Ba, Sr and Y compos...
Two cores from the southern South China Sea contain discrete ash layers that mainly consist of rhyol...
The Toba Caldera on Sumatra, Indonesia is the host of the Young Toba eruption (~74 ka), globally one...
The Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT, erupted ca. 74 ka ago) is a distinctive and widespread tephra marker ac...
Three volcanic ash layers were identified in a deep-sea Core IR-GC1 from the north-eastern Indian Oc...
A dispersed volcanic ash layer was recovered at similar to 300 cm depth in a 5.52 m long sediment co...
International audienceThe Indonesian Young Toba Tuff (YTT), classically dated around 74 ka BP, is co...
A controversy currently exists regarding the number of Toba eruptive events represented in the tephr...
Four primary glass populations, well defined by their Sr, Ba and Y concentrations, occur in the Youn...
Four primary glass populations, well defined by their Sr, Ba and Y concentrations, occur in the Youn...
Uncertainty over the identity and age of Toba tephras across peninsular India persists, with radiome...
Uncertainty over the identity and age of Toba tephras across peninsular India persists, with radiome...
Volcanic glasses with minor mafic mineral fragments, such as biotite and hornblende, found in deep-s...
Determination of the area density of spontaneous fission tracks (ρs) in glass shards of Toba tephra ...
The Youngest Toba Tuff contains five distinct glass populations, identified from Ba, Sr and Y compos...
Two cores from the southern South China Sea contain discrete ash layers that mainly consist of rhyol...
The Toba Caldera on Sumatra, Indonesia is the host of the Young Toba eruption (~74 ka), globally one...
The Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT, erupted ca. 74 ka ago) is a distinctive and widespread tephra marker ac...
Three volcanic ash layers were identified in a deep-sea Core IR-GC1 from the north-eastern Indian Oc...
A dispersed volcanic ash layer was recovered at similar to 300 cm depth in a 5.52 m long sediment co...
International audienceThe Indonesian Young Toba Tuff (YTT), classically dated around 74 ka BP, is co...
A controversy currently exists regarding the number of Toba eruptive events represented in the tephr...