
Dan Hammarlund
Professor

Holocene tephra horizons at Klocka Bog, west-central Sweden: aspects of reproducibility in subarctic peat deposits
Author
Summary, in English
This paper presents one of the most extensive Holocene tephra records found to date in Scandinavia. Microtephra horizons originating from Icelandic eruptions were recorded in two ca. 2 m thick peat profiles at Klocka Bog in west-central Sweden. Five of the microtephra horizons were geochemically correlated to the Askja-1875, Hekla-3, Kebister, Hekla-4 and Lairg A tephras respectively. Radiocarbon-based dating of these tephras broadly agree with previously published ages from Iceland, Sweden, Germany and the British Isles. The identification of the Lairg A tephra demonstrates a more widespread distribution than previously thought, extending the usefulness of Icelandic Holocene tephrochronology further north into west-central Scandinavia. Long-lasting snow cover and seasonal wind distribution in the lower stratosphere are suggested as factors that may be responsible for fragmentary tephra deposition patterns in peat deposits of subarctic Scandinavia.
Department/s
- Quaternary Sciences
Publishing year
2004
Language
English
Pages
241-249
Publication/Series
Journal of Quaternary Science
Volume
19
Issue
3
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons Inc.
Topic
- Geology
Keywords
- Klocka Bog
- holocene
- tephra
- tephrochronology
- Sweden
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1099-1417