Abstract

The caldera collapse of Deception Island Volcano, Antarctica, was comparable in scale to some of the largest eruptions on Earth over the last several millennia. Despite its magnitude and potential for far-reaching environmental effects, the age of this event has never been established, with estimates ranging from the late Pleistocene to 3370 years before present. Here we analyse nearby lake sediments in which we identify a singular event produced by Deception Island’s caldera collapse that occurred 3980 ± 125 calibrated years before present. The erupted tephra record the distinct geochemical composition of ejecta from the caldera-forming eruption, whilst an extreme seismic episode is recorded by lake sediments immediately overlying the collapse tephra. The newly constrained caldera collapse is now the largest volcanic eruption confirmed in Antarctica during the Holocene. An examination of palaeorecords reveals evidence in marine and lacustrine sediments for contemporaneous seismicity around the Antarctic Peninsula; synchronous glaciochemical volcanic signatures also record the eruption in ice cores spread around Antarctica, reaching >4600 km from source. The widespread footprint suggests that this eruption would have had significant climatic and ecological effects across a vast area of the south polar region.

Highlights

  • Deception Island is the largest active volcano in the Antarctic Peninsula region; with a basal diameter of 30 km it is on the scale of the volcanoes responsible for the largest eruptions on Earth over the last several millennia[9,10,11,12]

  • On Deception Island, the Outer Coast Tuff Formation (OCTF; Fig. 2b) is accepted to be the stratigraphic unit that corresponds to the caldera-forming eruption

  • The syn-caldera rocks contain evidence of mingling and co-eruption of two discrete magmas with geochemically distinct compositions, a feature found on Deception Island only in the OCTF

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Summary

Introduction

Deception Island is the largest active volcano in the Antarctic Peninsula region; with a basal diameter of 30 km it is on the scale of the volcanoes responsible for the largest eruptions on Earth over the last several millennia[9,10,11,12]. We examined sediments from Byers Peninsula lakes that preserve detailed, long-term environmental records of Deception Island volcanic activity in the form of tephra deposits.

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