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Featured researches published by Jodie K. Fisher.


Journal of the Geological Society | 2008

Late Pleistocene tephrochronology of marine sediments adjacent to Montserrat, Lesser Antilles volcanic arc

A. Le Friant; E.J. Lock; Malcolm B. Hart; Georges Boudon; R.S.J. Sparks; Melanie J. Leng; Christopher W. Smart; Jean-Christophe Komorowski; Christine Deplus; Jodie K. Fisher

The recent history of the Soufrière Hills volcano, Montserrat, Lesser Antilles volcanic arc, is deduced using data obtained from a submarine core collected in 2002. The core contains concentrations of ash and several tephra layers, which are identified by the abundance of glass shards, dense and poorly vesiculated particles, and scoria. The tephra layers have been dated using micropalaeontology and stable isotope stratigraphy. Tephra layers in a marine sediment core off the coast of Montserrat record the volcanic history of South Soufrière Hills–Soufrière Hills volcano back to 250 ka. Eight layers are composed of dense juvenile ash related to dome eruptions, five of which can be directly correlated to dated domes or related pyroclastic flow sequences on land. Six layers are composed of pumiceous glassy ash and relate to significant explosive eruptions. A marker sequence of basalt tephra layers is dated at 124–147 ka and is correlated with construction of the South Soufrière Hills basaltic stratocone. Pelagic sediments between the main tephra layers have low abundances of volcanogenic components (<15%) and suggest long periods (c. 104 years) of dormancy or low activity.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2014

Late Pleistocene stratigraphy of IODP Site U1396 and compiled chronology offshore of south and south west Montserrat, Lesser Antilles

Deborah Wall-Palmer; Maya Coussens; Peter J. Talling; Martin Jutzeler; Michael Cassidy; Isabelle Marchant; Martin R. Palmer; S.F.L. Watt; Christopher W. Smart; Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Andrew Fraass; J. Trofimovs; Anne Le Friant; Osamu Ishizuka; Tatsuya Adachi; Mohammed Aljahdali; Georges Boudon; Christoph Breitkreuz; Daisuke Endo; Akihiko Fujinawa; Robert G. Hatfield; Matthew J. Hornbach; Kyoko S. Kataoka; Sara Lafuerza; Fukashi Maeno; Michael Manga; Michael Martinez-Colon; Molly McCanta; Sally Morgan

Marine sediments around volcanic islands contain an archive of volcaniclastic deposits, which can be used to reconstruct the volcanic history of an area. Such records hold many advantages over often incomplete terrestrial data sets. This includes the potential for precise and continuous dating of intervening sediment packages, which allow a correlatable and temporally constrained stratigraphic framework to be constructed across multiple marine sediment cores. Here we discuss a marine record of eruptive and mass-wasting events spanning ∼250 ka offshore of Montserrat, using new data from IODP Expedition 340, as well as previously collected cores. By using a combination of high-resolution oxygen isotope stratigraphy, AMS radiocarbon dating, biostratigraphy of foraminifera and calcareous nannofossils, and clast componentry, we identify five major events at Soufriere Hills volcano since 250 ka. Lateral correlations of these events across sediment cores collected offshore of the south and south west of Montserrat have improved our understanding of the timing, extent and associations between events in this area. Correlations reveal that powerful and potentially erosive density-currents traveled at least 33 km offshore and demonstrate that marine deposits, produced by eruption-fed and mass-wasting events on volcanic islands, are heterogeneous in their spatial distribution. Thus, multiple drilling/coring sites are needed to reconstruct the full chronostratigraphy of volcanic islands. This multidisciplinary study will be vital to interpreting the chaotic records of submarine landslides at other sites drilled during Expedition 340 and provides a framework that can be applied to the stratigraphic analysis of sediments surrounding other volcanic islands.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2015

New insights into landslide processes around volcanic islands from Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) observations offshore Montserrat

S.F.L. Watt; Martin Jutzeler; Peter J. Talling; Steven Carey; R. S. J. Sparks; M. Tucker; Adam J. Stinton; Jodie K. Fisher; Deborah Wall-Palmer; Veit Hühnerbach; Steven Grahame Moreton

Submarine landslide deposits have been mapped around many volcanic islands, but interpretations of their structure, composition, and emplacement are hindered by the challenges of investigating deposits directly. Here we report on detailed observations of four landslide deposits around Montserrat collected by Remotely Operated Vehicles, integrating direct imagery and sampling with sediment core and geophysical data. These complementary approaches enable a more comprehensive view of large-scale mass-wasting processes around island-arc volcanoes than has been achievable previously. The most recent landslide occurred at 11.5–14 ka (Deposit 1; 1.7 km3) and formed a radially spreading hummocky deposit that is morphologically similar to many subaerial debris-avalanche deposits. Hummocks comprise angular lava and hydrothermally altered fragments, implying a deep-seated, central subaerial collapse, inferred to have removed a major proportion of lavas from an eruptive period that now has little representation in the subaerial volcanic record. A larger landslide (Deposit 2; 10 km3) occurred at ∼130 ka and transported intact fragments of the volcanic edifice, up to 900 m across and over 100 m high. These fragments were rafted within the landslide, and are best exposed near the margins of the deposit. The largest block preserves a primary stratigraphy of subaerial volcanic breccias, of which the lower parts are encased in hemipelagic mud eroded from the seafloor. Landslide deposits south of Montserrat (Deposits 3 and 5) indicate the wide variety of debris-avalanche source lithologies around volcanic islands. Deposit 5 originated on the shallow submerged shelf, rather than the terrestrial volcanic edifice, and is dominated by carbonate debris.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2013

Timing, origin and emplacement dynamics of mass flows offshore of SE Montserrat in the last 110 ka: Implications for landslide and tsunami hazards, eruption history, and volcanic island evolution

J. Trofimovs; Peter J. Talling; Jodie K. Fisher; R. S. J. Sparks; S.F.L. Watt; Malcolm B. Hart; Christopher W. Smart; A. Le Friant; M. Cassidy; Steven Grahame Moreton; Melanie J. Leng


Cretaceous Research | 2005

Stable isotope analysis of the Cenomanian–Turonian (Late Cretaceous) oceanic anoxic event in the Crimea

Jodie K. Fisher; Gregory D. Price; Malcolm B. Hart; Melanie J. Leng


Scopus | 2010

Evidence for carbonate platform failure during rapid sea-level rise; ca 14 000 year old bioclastic flow deposits in the Lesser Antilles

J. Trofimovs; Heather Macdonald; Peter J. Talling; Rsj Sparks; Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Christopher W. Smart; Georges Boudon; Christine Deplus; J-C. Komorowski; Le Friant A; Steven Grahame Moreton; Melanie J. Leng


Journal of iberian geology: an international publication of earth sciences | 2005

Micropalaeontology and Stratigraphy of the Cenomanian/Turonian boundary in the Lusitanian Basin, Portugal

Malcolm B. Hart; K. Hannant; Gregory D. Price; Jodie K. Fisher; J.F. Monteiro; Pedro Callapez; Matthew P. Watkinson


Marine Geology | 2011

Explosive volcanism as a cause for mass mortality of pteropods

Deborah Wall-Palmer; Morgan T. Jones; Malcolm B. Hart; Jodie K. Fisher; Christopher W. Smart; Deborah J. Hembury; Martin R. Palmer; Gary R. Fones


Archive | 2015

Foraminifera from the Fowey Estuary, Cornwall

Christopher W. Smart; Sj Stubbles; Jodie K. Fisher; I Marshall-Penn; Malcolm B. Hart; C Hoddinott; A Yeo


Science & Engineering Faculty | 2008

Tephrochronology of marine sediments around the Island of Montserrat, Lesser Antilles volcanic arc

Jodie K. Fisher; Malcolm B. Hart; Christopher W. Smart; Melanie J. Leng; Stephen Sparks; Peter J. Talling; J. Trofimovs

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Malcolm B. Hart

Plymouth State University

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Melanie J. Leng

British Geological Survey

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S.F.L. Watt

University of Birmingham

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Martin R. Palmer

National Oceanography Centre

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