Neall VMcGee LTurner MO'Neill TZernack AAthens JSSpecht, JAttenbrow, VAllen, J2023-07-232021-05-122023-07-232021-05-12Technical Reports of the Australian Museum, Online, 2021, 34 (From Field to Museum—Studies from Melanesia in Honour of Robin Torrence), pp. 5 - 241835-4211http://hdl.handle.net/10179/16833Electron microprobe analyses were conducted on volcanic glasses extracted from Holocene tephra marker beds on the Willaumez isthmus in West New Britain, Papua New Guinea. These tephra beds are pivotal in the dating of a wide range of human artefacts and manuports found in the intervening buried soils, extending back over the last 40,000 years. Three major groups can be easily separated: W-K1 and 2; W-K3 and 4; and the Dakataua tephra. Of the remaining post-W-K4 tephras, most show slightly higher FeO and CaO and lower SiO2 contents than the W-K3 and 4 group, although there is some overlap. The combination of these geochemical data sets with the known stratigraphy and radiocarbon dates has helped resolve tephra correlation where these ashes become thin and less visually diagnostic or where pumice has been resorted and redeposited by the Kulu-Dulagi River.5 - 24Copyright: © 2021 Neall, McGee, Turner, O’Neill, Zernack, Athens. This is an open access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.Papua New Guinea; New Britain; Willaumez Peninsula; Holocene tephras; geochemical fingerprintingGeochemical fingerprinting of Holocene tephras in the Willaumez Isthmus District of West New Britain, Papua New GuineaJournal article10.3853/j.1835-4211.34.2021.1740450251Massey_Dark0608 Zoology2101 Archaeology