Geosciences (Jul 2017)
Multimethod Approach to the Study of Recent Volcanic Ashes from Tengger Volcanic Complex, Eastern Java, Indonesia
Abstract
Volcanic ash is a volcanic product with a wide distribution that can be used as a geological marker. In volcanic regions such as Indonesia, the identification of the sources of volcanic ash and tuff layers from different volcanoes or eruptive events is a challenging task. In this study, samples of volcanic ash from the 2010 eruption of Bromo—a relatively young and active tuff cone volcano within the Sandsea caldera in the Tengger volcanic complex in East Java, Indonesia—along with two older tuff layers from the same caldera (Widodaren tuff: 1.8 kyr and Segarawedi tuff: 33 kyr) were subjected to magnetic measurements, geochemical analyses, and petrographic analyses. The aim is to attempt to use magnetic characters as a fingerprint for volcanic ash and tuff layers. The results show that the samples had variations in grain size and magnetic domain as indicated by the hysteresis parameters. These magnetic characters correlated with the results of geochemical and petrographic analyses, suggesting that magnetic properties may potentially be used as fingerprints to identify volcanic ashes and tuff layers.
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