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Cited 24 time in webofscience Cited 26 time in scopus
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Eruption and emplacement of a laterally extensive, crystal-rich, and pumice-free ignimbrite (the Cretaceous Kusandong Tuff, Korea)

Authors
Sohn, Y. K.Son, M.Jeong, J. O.Jeon, Y. M.
Issue Date
Oct-2009
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Keywords
Kusandong Tuff; Gyeongsang Basin; Ignimbrite; Pyroclastic density current; Depositional process; Syntectonic volcanism
Citation
Sedimentary Geology, v.220, no.3-4, pp 190 - 203
Pages
14
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Sedimentary Geology
Volume
220
Number
3-4
Start Page
190
End Page
203
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/26142
DOI
10.1016/j.sedgeo.2009.04.020
ISSN
0037-0738
1879-0968
Abstract
The Cretaceous Kusandong Tuff, Korea, is a thin (1-5 m thick) but laterally extensive (similar to 200 km) silicic ignimbrite emplaced in a. uviolacustrine basin adjacent to a continental volcanic arc. The tuff has been used as an excellent key bed because of its great lateral continuity and unique lithology, characterized by the virtual absence of juvenile clasts and an abundance of quartz and feldspar crystals (up to 55-73 vol.%). The tuff is mostly massive and ungraded and locally shows crude internal layering, basal inverse grading and near-top normal grading of crystals, either erosional or non-erosional lower surfaces, and. at-lying to imbricated grain fabrics. Fragile intraformational clasts of mudstone and tuff are also included. These features provide only ambiguous information on the properties of the responsible pyroclastic density currents: i.e. whether they were dense and laminar or dilute and turbulent. The overall lateral continuity and sheet-like geometry of the tuff suggests, however, that the transport system of the currents was highly expanded, dilute, and turbulent. A plug-flow or slab-flow model cannot explain the origin of crude internal layering, imbricated grain fabrics, and the high crystal content, which is most likely the result of vigorous sorting processes within a dilute and turbulent current. Features indicative of deposition from a dense and laminar transporting medium are locally present, suggesting that a dense and laminar depositional system could develop locally at the base of the dilute and turbulent transport system. The virtual absence of juvenile clasts in the tuff is interpreted to be due to rapid ascent, sudden decompression, and full fragmentation of silicic magma into. ne glass shards and crystals. Scarcity of basement-derived accidental components together with the absence of pumiceous fallout deposits beneath the tuff is interpreted to be due to shallow-level fragmentation of magma followed by immediate generation of pyroclastic density currents from shallow-level blasts at the onset of eruption. The eruption occurred through multiple vent sites in a short period of time, producing a seemingly single but actually composite ignimbrite unit. Such an eruption was probably possible because of a regional tectonic event within the basin or in its vicinity. It is proposed that a composite ignimbrite with the characteristics of the Kusandong Tuff can be an exemplary product of syntectonic volcanism that can provide an insight into the interpretation of structural and stratigraphic evolution of a sedimentary basin. (C) 2009 Elsevier B. V. All rights reserved.
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