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Westgate, J. A., Walter, R. C., Pearce, G. W., Gorton, M. P. (1985) Distribution, stratigraphy, petrochemistry, and palaeomagnetism of the late Pleistocene Old Crow tephra in Alaska and the Yukon. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (6) 893-906 doi:10.1139/e85-093

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleDistribution, stratigraphy, petrochemistry, and palaeomagnetism of the late Pleistocene Old Crow tephra in Alaska and the Yukon
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsWestgate, J. A.Author
Walter, R. C.Author
Pearce, G. W.Author
Gorton, M. P.Author
Year1985 (June 1)Volume22
Issue6
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e85-093Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID478705Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:478705:5
GUID0
Full ReferenceWestgate, J. A., Walter, R. C., Pearce, G. W., Gorton, M. P. (1985) Distribution, stratigraphy, petrochemistry, and palaeomagnetism of the late Pleistocene Old Crow tephra in Alaska and the Yukon. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (6) 893-906 doi:10.1139/e85-093
Plain TextWestgate, J. A., Walter, R. C., Pearce, G. W., Gorton, M. P. (1985) Distribution, stratigraphy, petrochemistry, and palaeomagnetism of the late Pleistocene Old Crow tephra in Alaska and the Yukon. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 22 (6) 893-906 doi:10.1139/e85-093
In(1985, June) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 22 (6) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The late Quaternary Old Crow tephra is a two-pyroxene, calc-alkaline dacite whose known areal extent is broadly delimited by a triangle with apices at the Seward Peninsula, the Wrangell Mountains, and the Old Crow Basin in the northern Yukon. Everywhere the tephra is fine grained (Mdσ = 5.33 ± 0.32) and moderately to poorly sorted (6σ = 1.33 ± 0.29). Samples from the extremities of the fall-out zone have similarity coefficients of 0.95.A palaeomagnetic excursion is recorded in sediments just below Old Crow tephra in the Fairbanks area and at Imuruk Lake on the Seward Peninsula. A short, full reversal of the magnetic field has been preserved at the corresponding stratigraphic level near Old Crow in the northern Yukon. Chronological controls based on 14C and fission-track dates and sedimentation rates show that these palaeomagnetic features are almost certainly partial records of the complex geomagnetic Blake Event, which occurred 100–120 ka ago.New petrochemical data demonstrate that the source of Old Crow tephra is in the eastern Aleutian arc.


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