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Text Description: Only present at Site C of Chester Bluff. The Biederman tephra (BT) is up to 2 cm thick at Site C, forms pods up to 10 cm long, is continuous over 8m and has a salt and pepper appearance. It either rests directly on the surface of or is reworked into the upper-most organic unit of this exposure. At the upstream end of the exposure the organic unit is over-thickened and locally draped into an ice wedge cast about 1.7m deep. The ice wedge cast fill includes 1m of reworked organic-rich loess, indicating the ice wedge melted out when organic material was accumulating on the surface and accumulation continued after the cast was filled. BT forms rare pods in the loess that fills the cast. At the downstream end of the exposure, BT can be traced at the same elevation until it is truncated by a modern gully. Generally has highly inflated pumice and is particularly rich in phenocrysts, which are overwhelmingly green amphibole. The composition reported was calculated from analyses of three samples: UT1888, UA1080, and UT1884. References: ![]() ![]() |
StationID | Latitude | Longitude | Geologist | DateVisited | Age Info | Volcano | Eruption | Location Description | Text Description | Sample ID | Sample Type 1 | Sample Type 2 | Final Unit | Material | Coeff | SiO2 | TiO2 | Al2O3 | FeOT | MnO | MgO | CaO | Na2O | K2O | P2O5 | Total-majors | REF majors | METH majors | Fe2O3/Fe203T orig | FeO/FeOT orig | Volatiles csv | METH volatiles | Cs | Rb | Ba | Sr | La | Ce | Pr | Nd | Sm | Eu | Gd | Tb | Dy | Ho | Er | Tm | Yb | Lu | Y | Zr | Nb | Hf | Ta | Pb | Th | U | Sc | V | Cr | Fe | Co | Ni | Cu | Zn | Ga | Mo | As | Na | K | Ref trace1 | METH trace1 | Rb | Ba | Sr | La | Ce | Nd | Sm | Eu | Gd | Dy | Er | Yb | Lu | Y | Zr | Nb | Pb | Th | U | Sc | Ti | V | Cr | Ni | Cu | Zn | Ga | Ref trace2 | METH trace2 | Light csv | Halogen csv | other major csv | other lile csv | other ree csv | other hfse csv | other hpe csv | other tm csv | other misc csv | |
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Jensen_2008_Chester_Bluff | 65.38 | -142.66997 | Jensen, B. J. L. | Chester Bluff is located in Yukon Charley Rivers National Preserve (YCNP) in east-central Alaska, on the northwest bank of the Yukon River directly upstream from its confluence with the Charley River. It is a terrace comprising a series of individual bluffs dissected by gullies that extend laterally for about 3 km. The south-facing bluffs are dry and substantial excavation (>2m) is needed to reach frozen sediments. Chester Bluff can be broadly differentiated into four units. The base of the bluff is a bedrock terrace exposed up to ~10 m above river level, composed of argillite, part of the Cretaceous Biederman Formation. Deposited on the terrace are 8-10 m of paleo-Yukon River gravel, which are overlain by 5-10 m of sand and silt rhythmites with minor gravel and planar-bedded sand. Up to 40 m of silt, interpreted as loess and interbedded with multiple organic horizons and tephra beds, cap the sequence. Sites A through C were visited in the area and were found to host 19 distinct tephra beds. A near vertical slope at Site A prevented trench completion. Two trenches were excavated on either side of Site A to examine the lateral continuity of tephra beds. Site B was successfully logged from the top of the bluff to the upper-most sand unit associated with the flood deposits. Thick colluvium at Site C prevented completion of the trench at this site. No coordinates provided; location imprecisely georeferenced from Figure 1 in Jensen et al. (2008). | Only present at Site C of Chester Bluff. The Biederman tephra (BT) is up to 2 cm thick at Site C, forms pods up to 10 cm long, is continuous over 8m and has a salt and pepper appearance. It either rests directly on the surface of or is reworked into the upper-most organic unit of this exposure. At the upstream end of the exposure the organic unit is over-thickened and locally draped into an ice wedge cast about 1.7m deep. The ice wedge cast fill includes 1m of reworked organic-rich loess, indicating the ice wedge melted out when organic material was accumulating on the surface and accumulation continued after the cast was filled. BT forms rare pods in the loess that fills the cast. At the downstream end of the exposure, BT can be traced at the same elevation until it is truncated by a modern gully. Generally has highly inflated pumice and is particularly rich in phenocrysts, which are overwhelmingly green amphibole. The composition reported was calculated from analyses of three samples: UT1888, UA1080, and UT1884. | Jensen_2008_Chester_Bluff_Biederman_tephra-P2 | Tephra Fall | Cumulate | Glass | 69.14 | 0.38 | 15 | 3.22 | 0.06 | 2.15 | 3.69 | 3.77 | 2.57 | 6162 | EMP | 3.22 | Cl=0.04; H2O=2.54 | EMP |
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