Abstract

Tephra layers in lake sediment cores are regularly used for tephrostratigraphy as isochronous features for dating and recording eruption frequencies. However, their value for determining volcanic eruption size and style may be complicated by processes occurring in the lake that modify the thickness and grain size distributions of the deposit. To assess the reliability of data from lake cores, we compare tephra deposited on land during the 2015 eruption of Calbuco volcano in Chile to records in sediment cores from three lakes of different sizes that are known to have received primary fall deposits. In general, the thickness and granulometry of the deposit in lake cores and nearby terrestrial sections are very similar. As anticipated, however, cores sampled close to (here, within 300 m of) fluvial inflows were affected by sediment deposition from the lake’s catchment; they differed from primary deposits not only in their greater thickness and organic content but also in poor sorting and lack of grading. Cores 850 m away from the inlet were not affected. We consider our results in the context of the particle settling regime as well as each lake’s location, bathymetry and catchment area. We find that the particle settling regime is important in more distal settings where the ash particles are small and particle settling occurs in density plumes rather than as individual particles. We conclude that lake cores can be useful for physical volcanology providing consideration is given to eruption parameters such as particle size and mass flux, as well as lake features such as bathymetry and catchment area.

Highlights

  • Lake sediment cores are an invaluable source of information in many spheres of Earth Science such as climatology and volcanology

  • This usually comprises pyroclastic material that is released from the ash cloud and settles through the atmosphere onto the lake but can include deposits from pyroclastic density currents and lahars transported as gravity-driven flows

  • Our results show that the lake cores are representative of the deposits on land, so we infer that the particles settled individually, rather than by collective settling in plumes

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Summary

Introduction

Lake sediment cores (lake cores) are an invaluable source of information in many spheres of Earth Science such as climatology and volcanology. They can record information about the evolution of water chemistry and aquatic life on time. Lake cores provide a record of the volcanic material deposited during an eruption. This usually comprises pyroclastic material that is released from the ash cloud and settles through the atmosphere onto the lake but can include deposits from pyroclastic density currents and lahars transported as gravity-driven flows.

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