Abstract
Tephra layers from explosive eruptions can provide valuable isochronous marker horizons for paleoenvironmental studies across large regions. East Asia and Southeast Asia are host to more than half of the Earth's subaerial volcanoes, and tephras from these volcanoes offer significant numbers of widely distributed marker layers. However, the integrated tephrostratigraphic framework of this region is less refined because only limited (crypto-) tephra sequences have been established. In this study, we present a cryptotephra sequence covering the period ∼60–50 ka in East Asia from a lacustrine sediment from Huguangyan Maar Lake, southern China. Four cryptotephra layers were identified, one of which can be correlated with the ∼53.8 ka Unnan eruption (SUn) of Sambe volcano, Japan. This tephra provides a critical isochronous marker horizon for linking paleoenvironmental records from central Japan to southern China, illustrating a consistent environmental shift during early MIS 3 across this region. The three other tephras cannot be correlated with known eruptions, but glass geochemical compositions suggest that they may be from Japan or surrounding areas, implying that they too may be widely distributed around East Asia. Importantly, two of them feature at the start of MIS 3, and thus can be potentially be used to establish the synchroneity of the onset of MIS 3 around East Asia, overcoming challenges that presently hinder the dating of early MIS 3 in this region.
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