Thin, but laterally widespread, fallout ash tuff layers interbedded with complex fluviolacustrine
successions of the Carboniferous–Permian late Variscan intermontane Saar–Nahe Basin in
southwestern Germany provide important tephrostratigraphic markers in the purely continental depositional
setting. The tuffs are rhyolitic to rhyodacitic and indicate geochemical affinities to
Moldanubian Variscan S-type granitoids. The volcanic ashes are suggested to have been derived from
the general region of the central and northern Black Forest (southwestern Germany) and the northern
Vosges (eastern France) at 100–150 km distance south of the Saar–Nahe Basin. Six tuff beds from the
Jeckenbach and Odernheim subformations (Meisenheim Formation, Glan Group) have been correlated
within the basin over a distance of 50 km by mapping and whole-rock geochemical fingerprinting.
In each subformation, three tuffs can be well distinguished using geochemical discriminant
function analysis. Additional comparisons of trace and rare-earth element contents provide further
criteria for the differentiation of individual tuff beds. These discriminations show that the tuffs have
unique chemical fingerprints, probably reflecting differences in the original composition of the parent
volcanic tephra. Thus, chemical differences between the tephrostratigraphic markers are geologically
significant and provide a powerful tool for establishing tuff layer identification and correlation within
the complex sedimentary sequence of the Saar–Nahe Basin. They also provide clues to the tectonomagmatic
settings of the source volcanoes.