Abstract

ABSTRACTWe describe the stratigraphy, age, geochemistry and correlation of tephra from west to east across the northern Patagonian Andes (c. 40–41°S) with a view to further refining the eruptive history of this region back to the onset of the Last Glacial Termination (~18 cal. ka). Eastwards across the Andes, rhyodacite to rhyolitic tephra markers of dominantly Puyehue‐Cordón Caulle source are persistently recognised and provide a stratigraphic context for more numerously erupted intervening tephra of basalt to basaltic–andesite composition. Tephra from distal eruptive centres are also recognised.West of the Andean Cordillera, organic‐rich cores from a small closed lake basin (Lago Pichilafquén) reveal an exceptional high‐resolution record of lowland vegetation–climate change and eruptive activity spanning the last 15 400 years. Three new rhyodacite tephra (BT6‐T1, ‐T2 and ‐T4) identified near the base of the Pichilafquén record, spanning 13.2 to 13.9 cal. ka bp, can be geochemically matched with correlatives in basal andic soil sequences closely overlying regolith and/or basement rock. The repetitiveness of this tephrostratigraphy across this Andean transect suggests near‐synchronous tephra accretion and onset of up‐building soil formation under more stable (revegetating) ground‐surface conditions following rapid piedmont deglaciation on both sides of the Cordillera by at least ~14 cal. ka bp.

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