A trachytic volcanic ash layer is widely distributed across south-western Russia, where it is found both in well-characterised archaeological contexts close to the Don River (the Paleolithic sites of Kostenki-Borschevo (51.4°N, 39.0°E), and in undisturbed geological contexts. This ash layer has all of the characteristics of a distal tephra fall deposit: it is fine grained and unimodal with a grain size of 60–170μm, dominated by strongly elongate glass shard fragments.\ud Chemical analysis confirms that this ash layer is a distal equivalent of the deposits of the ca 39.3ka Campanian Ignimbrite eruption of the Phlegrean Fields, Italy, and correlates with the widely recognised Y5 ash layer in marine cores in the south-eastern Mediterranean. Th...
The 40 ka caldera-forming eruption of Campi Flegrei (Italy) is the largest known eruption in Europe ...
Following on the discovery (in 2011) of a layer of distal tephra from the Pomici di Avellino eruptio...
The study of volcanic ashes (or “tephra”) has an enormous potential for volcanic stratigraphy and ex...
New tephrostratigraphic data from three marine cores sampled in different depositional settings arou...
The Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) volcanic eruption was the most explosive in Europe in the last 200,000...
The Campanian Ignimbrite eruption dispersed ash over much of the central eastern Mediterranean Sea a...
Tephra layers from archaeological sites in southern Italy and eastern Europe stratigraphically assoc...
Tephra layers from archaeological sites in southern Italy and eastern Europe stratigraphically assoc...
In addition to the destruction of the sites close to the volcanoes, the accumulation of volcanic ash...
A number of volcanic ash layers embedded in Pleistocene loess and fluvial deposits of the lower Jiu ...
International audienceThe 40 ka caldera-forming eruption of Campi Flegrei (Italy) is the largest kno...
A 1075 cm long core (Lz1120) was recovered in the south-eastern part of the Lake Ohrid (Republics of...
A composite 40.2 m sediment sequence from Megali Limni, Lesvos Island, Greece, spanning the interval...
1] We apply a novel computational approach to assess, for the first time, volcanic ash dispersal d...
The 40 ka caldera-forming eruption of Campi Flegrei (Italy) is the largest known eruption in Europe ...
Following on the discovery (in 2011) of a layer of distal tephra from the Pomici di Avellino eruptio...
The study of volcanic ashes (or “tephra”) has an enormous potential for volcanic stratigraphy and ex...
New tephrostratigraphic data from three marine cores sampled in different depositional settings arou...
The Campanian Ignimbrite (CI) volcanic eruption was the most explosive in Europe in the last 200,000...
The Campanian Ignimbrite eruption dispersed ash over much of the central eastern Mediterranean Sea a...
Tephra layers from archaeological sites in southern Italy and eastern Europe stratigraphically assoc...
Tephra layers from archaeological sites in southern Italy and eastern Europe stratigraphically assoc...
In addition to the destruction of the sites close to the volcanoes, the accumulation of volcanic ash...
A number of volcanic ash layers embedded in Pleistocene loess and fluvial deposits of the lower Jiu ...
International audienceThe 40 ka caldera-forming eruption of Campi Flegrei (Italy) is the largest kno...
A 1075 cm long core (Lz1120) was recovered in the south-eastern part of the Lake Ohrid (Republics of...
A composite 40.2 m sediment sequence from Megali Limni, Lesvos Island, Greece, spanning the interval...
1] We apply a novel computational approach to assess, for the first time, volcanic ash dispersal d...
The 40 ka caldera-forming eruption of Campi Flegrei (Italy) is the largest known eruption in Europe ...
Following on the discovery (in 2011) of a layer of distal tephra from the Pomici di Avellino eruptio...
The study of volcanic ashes (or “tephra”) has an enormous potential for volcanic stratigraphy and ex...