Age and significance of the Late Pleistocene Dawson tephra in eastern Beringla


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Authors: Froese, D; Westgate, J; Preece, S; Storer, J
Year: 2002
Journal: Quat. Sci. Rev. 21: 2137-2142   Article Link (DOI)
Title: Age and significance of the Late Pleistocene Dawson tephra in eastern Beringla
Abstract: Dawson tephra, recently recognized in the Klondike area of Yukon Territory, records one of the largest Quaternary volcanic eruptions in Beringia. Its composition is similar to that of Old Crow tephra, indicating a source in the Aleutian arc-Alaska Peninsula region of southwestern Alaska. Its primary thickness in central Yukon is nearly twice that of Old Crow tephra, which has an estimated eruption volume of > 50 km(3). The distribution of Dawson tephra is still poorly known, but based on its source area and occurrence in central Yukon, it should be widespread across southern Alaska, Yukon and the Gulf of Alaska. New radiocarbon ages indicate the eruption occurred at about 24,000 C-14 yr BP (ca 27,000 cal yr BP). The Dawson tephra is a valuable marker bed for correlating late Pleistocene records across large areas of eastern Beringia and adjacent marine records. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
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