Discriminant Function Analysis of Glass Chemistry of New Zealand and North American Tephra Deposits
- 20 January 1994
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Quaternary Research
- Vol. 41 (1) , 70-81
- https://doi.org/10.1006/qres.1994.1008
Abstract
Major, trace, and rare earth element analyses of volcanic glass are used separately or in combination for correlating Quaternary tephras, often by graphical or simple comparative methods. We have taken a statistical approach using discriminant function analysis (DFA) to assess the relative discriminating power of the different elements in volcanic glasses from several tectonovolcanic provinces. We found that major oxides are powerful discriminating variables for widespread tephras from the Taupo Volcanic Zone in New Zealand and here they can be more discriminating than trace elements. A wide selection of tephras from the western United States can also be distinguished on major oxides alone, particularly those from Cascade Range volcanoes. For tephras from large intracontinental calderas, such as Long Valley or Yellowstone, REE and trace elements are more effective at discriminating than major oxides. However, tephras erupted from the Long Valley area can be distinguished on major oxide composition by DFA, despite their similar chemistry. The selection and relative significance of different elements for discriminating tephras depends on the total data set being compared, as well as the source volcano and the individual eruptive events. Caution must be exercised in the nonstatistical selection of compositional data for characterizing tephras: DFA is a more powerful and objective tool for the comparison of tephra chemistry.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Zircon fission track age for middle Pleistocene Rangitawa Tephra, New Zealand: stratigraphic and paleoclimatic significancePublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Revision of the marine chronology in the Wanganui Basin, New Zealand, based on the isothermal plateau fission-track dating of tephra horizonsSedimentary Geology, 1993
- Another look at the constant sum problem in geochemistryMineralogical Magazine, 1992
- Glass chemistry, paleomagnetism, and correlation of middle Pleistocene tuffs in southern North Island, New Zealand, and Western PacificNew Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1991
- Evidence for limited zonation in silicic magma systems, Taupo Volcanic Zone, New ZealandGeology, 1989
- Discriminant Function Analysis of Late Quaternary Tephras from Five Volcanoes in New Zealand Using Glass Shard Major Element ChemistryQuaternary Research, 1988
- Distribution, stratigraphy, petrochemistry, and palaeomagnetism of the late Pleistocene Old Crow tephra in Alaska and the YukonCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1985
- Correlation of the Rockland Ash Bed, a 400,000-Year-Old Stratigraphic Marker in Northern California and Western Nevada, and Implications for Middle Pleistocene Paleogeography of Central CaliforniaQuaternary Research, 1985
- Correlation of Late Quaternary Tephra Layers in a Long Pluvial Sequence near Summer Lake, OregonQuaternary Research, 1985
- Toward a Comprehensive Upper Quaternary Tephra and Ignimbrite Stratigraphy in New Zealand using Electron Microprobe Analysis of Glass ShardsQuaternary Research, 1983