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Featured researches published by Wendy Perez.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008

Pacific offshore record of plinian arc volcanism in Central America: 1. Along-arc correlations

Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; Wendy Perez; Tobias Mörz; U. Schacht; Heidi Wehrmann; Hans-Ulrich Schmincke

We collected 56 marine gravity cores from the Pacific seafloor offshore Central America which contain a total of 213 volcanic ash beds. Ash-layer correlations between cores and with their parental tephras on land use stratigraphic, lithologic, and compositional criteria. In particular, we make use of our newly built database of bulk-rock, mineral, and glass major and trace element compositions of plinian and similarly widespread tephras erupted since the Pleistocene along the Central American Volcanic Arc. We thus identify the distal ashes of 11 Nicaraguan, 8 El Salvadorian, 6 Guatemalan, and 1 Costa Rican eruptions. Relatively uniform pelagic sedimentation rates allow us to determine ages of 10 previously undated tephras by their relative position between ash layers of known age. Linking the marine and terrestrial records yields a tephrostratigraphic framework for the Central American volcanic arc from Costa Rica to Guatemala. This is a useful tool and prerequisite to understand the evolution of volcanism at a whole-arc scale.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008

Pacific offshore record of plinian arc volcanism in Central America: 2. Tephra volumes and erupted masses

Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; Wendy Perez

[1] Sediment gravity cores collected from the Pacific seafloor offshore Central America contain numerous distal ash layers from plinian-type eruptions at the Central American Volcanic Arc dating back to more than 200 ka. In part 1 of this contribution we have correlated many of those ash layers between cores and with 26 tephras on land. The marine ash layers cover areas of up to 106 km2 in the Pacific Ocean and represent a major fraction (60–90%) of the erupted tephra volumes because the Pacific coast lies within a few tens of kilometers downwind from the volcanic arc. Combining our own mapping efforts on land and published mapping results with our marine data yields erupted volumes of all major tephras along the arc that range from ∼1 to 420 km3. Recalculated to erupted magma mass, the widespread tephras account for 65% of the total magma output at the arc. Complementing our tephra data with published volumes of the arc volcanic edifices and volcano ages, we calculate the long-term average magma eruption rates for each volcano. Moreover, we use incompatible element variations to calculate the cumulate masses that were fractionated during variable degrees of differentiation. This yields a minimum estimate of long-term average magma production rate at each volcano, because intrusives without surface expression and losses by erosion are not accounted for. Peak magma production rates increase from Costa Rica to Guatemala, but there is considerable scatter within each region and large differences even between neighboring volcanoes.


Geology | 2013

Combined bromine and chlorine release from large explosive volcanic eruptions: A threat to stratospheric ozone?

Steffen Kutterolf; Thor H. Hansteen; Karen Appel; Armin Freundt; Kirstin Krüger; Wendy Perez; Heidi Wehrmann

Large explosive volcanic eruptions inject gases, aerosols, and fi ne ashes into the stratosphere, potentially infl uencing climate. Emissions of chlorine (Cl) and bromine (Br) from such large eruptions play an important role for catalytic destruction of ozone in the stratosphere, but hitherto the global effects of simultaneous catastrophic release of volcanic Br and Cl into the stratosphere have not been investigated. The Br release from 14 large explosive eruptions throughout Nicaragua covering an entire subduction zone segment in the past 70 ka was determined with petrologic methods. Melt inclusions in volcanic phenocrysts were analyzed using a new optimized synchrotron‐X-ray fl uorescence microprobe set-up. Single eruptions produced Br outputs of 4‐600 kt, giving an average Br emission of 27 kt per eruption. Using the assumption that 10% of the emitted halogens reach the stratosphere, the average Br and Cl loading to the stratosphere would be 3 ppt and 1500 ppt, respectively, which together would account for 185% of the preindustrial equivalent effective stratospheric Cl loading. We thus conclude that many large tropical volcanic eruptions had and have the potential to substantially deplete ozone on a global scale, eventually forming future ozone holes.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008

Pacific offshore record of plinian arc volcanism in Central America: 3. Application to forearc geology

Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; U. Schacht; Dietmar Bürk; Rieka Harders; Tobias Mörz; Wendy Perez

[1] Sediment gravity cores collected on the Pacific slope and incoming plate offshore Central America reach up to 400 ka back in time and contain numerous ash layers from plinian eruptions at the Central American Volcanic Arc. The compositionally distinct widespread ash layers form a framework of marker horizons that allow us to stratigraphically correlate the sediment successions along and across the Middle America Trench. Moreover, ash layers correlated with 26 known eruptions on land provide absolute time lines through these successions. Having demonstrated the correlations in part 1, we here investigate implications for submarine sedimentary processes. Average accumulation rates of pelagic sediment packages constrained by bracketing tephras of known age range from ∼1–6 cm/ka on the incoming plate to 30–40 cm/ka on the continental slope. There are time intervals in which the apparent pelagic sedimentation rates significantly vary laterally both on the forearc and on the incoming plate where steady conditions are usually expected. A period of unsteadiness at 17–25 ka on the forearc coincides with a period of intense erosion on land probably triggered by tectonic processes. Unsteady conditions on the incoming plate are attributed to bend faulting across the outer rise triggering erosion and resedimentation. Extremely low apparent sedimentation rates at time intervals >50–80 ka suggest stronger tectonic activity than during younger times and indicate bend faulting is unsteady on a longer timescale. Submarine landslides are often associated with ash layers forming structurally weak zones used for detachment. Ash beds constrain ages of >60 ka, ∼19 ka, and <6 ka for three landslides offshore Nicaragua. Phases of intense fluid venting at mud mounds produce typical sediments around the mound that become covered by normal pelagic sediment during phases of weak or no activity. Using intercalated ash layers, we determine for the first time the durations (several hundred to 9000 years) of highly active periods in the multistage growth history of mud mounds offshore Central America, which is essential to understand general mud-mound dynamics.


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2007

Late Pleistocene to Holocene temporal succession and magnitudes of highly-explosive volcanic eruptions in west-central Nicaragua

Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; Wendy Perez; Heidi Wehrmann; Hans-Ulrich Schmincke


In: Volcanic hazards in Central America. , ed. by Rose, W. I., Bluth, G., Carr, M. J., Ewert, J., Patino, L. and Vallance, J. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 412 . Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado, pp. 189-207. | 2006

The youngest highly explosive basaltic eruptions from Masaya Caldera Complex (Nicaragua): Stratigraphy and hazard assessment

Wendy Perez; Armin Freundt


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2009

The Masaya Triple Layer: a 2100 year old basaltic multi-episodic Plinian eruption from the Masaya Caldera Complex (Nicaragua)

Wendy Perez; Armin Freundt; Steffen Kutterolf; Hans-Ulrich Schmincke


Freundt, Armin, Kutterolf, Steffen, Schmincke, Hans-Ulrich, Hansteen, Thor, Wehrmann, Heidi, Perez, Wendy, Strauch, W. and Navarro, M. (2006) Volcanic hazards in Nicaragua: Past, present, and future Volcanic hazards in Central America. Geological Society of America Special Paper, 412 . Geological Society of America, Boulder, Colorado, pp. 141-165. DOI 10.1130/2006.2412(08) <http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/2006.2412(08)>. | 2006

Volcanic hazards in Nicaragua: Past, present, and future

Armin Freundt; Steffen Kutterolf; Hans-Ulrich Schmincke; Thor Hansteen; Heidi Wehrmann; Wendy Perez; Wilfried Strauch; Martha Navarro


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015

Bromine and chlorine emissions from Plinian eruptions along the Central American Volcanic Arc: From source to atmosphere

Steffen Kutterolf; Thor H. Hansteen; Armin Freundt; Heidi Wehrmann; Karen Appel; Kirstin Krüger; Wendy Perez


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2016

A 400-ka tephrochronological framework for Central America from Lake Petén Itzá (Guatemala) sediments

Steffen Kutterolf; Julie Schindlbeck; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Daniel Ariztegui; Mark Brenner; Jason H. Curtis; D. Schmid; David A. Hodell; Anne D. Mueller; Liseth Pérez; Wendy Perez; Antje Schwalb; Matthias Frische; Kuo Lung Wang

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U. Schacht

University of Adelaide

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