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Intermittent non-axial dipolar-field dominance of twin Laschamp excursions

Communications Earth and Environment, ISSN: 2662-4435, Vol: 3, Issue: 1
2022
  • 2
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 15
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 13
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    2
    • Citation Indexes
      2
  • Captures
    15
  • Social Media
    13
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      13
      • Facebook
        13

Article Description

Geomagnetic excursions represent the dynamic nature of the geodynamo. Accumulated palaeomagnetic records indicate that such excursions are dominated by dipolar-fields, but exhibit different structures. Here we report a palaeomagnetic record from the varved sediments of Lake Suigetsu, central Japan, which reveals fine structures in the Laschamp Excursion and a new post-Laschamp excursion that coincides with the ΔC maxima. The record’s high-resolution chronology provides IntCal20 mid-ages and varve-counted durations. Both excursions comprise multiple subcentennial directional-swings. Simulations of filtering effects on sediment-magnetisations demonstrate that this high-resolution record replicates most of the features in existing, lower-resolution Laschamp excursion records, including the apparent clockwise open-loop of the virtual geomagnetic pole pass. The virtual geomagnetic poles during the ‘swing’ phases make four clusters centred in hemispherically-symmetric regions, three of which encompass the virtual geomagnetic poles associated with the Laschamp Excursion recorded in lavas at various locations. The stationary dipolar-field sources under each cluster should have intermittently dominated one after another during the excursions.

Bibliographic Details

Masayuki Hyodo; Balázs Bradák; Hayato Matsushita; Shota Tanabe; Masako Miki; Kosuke Tsumura; Kaito Inagawa; Koyo Kumazawa; Haruka Abe; Takeshi Nakagawa; Ikuko Kitaba; Keitaro Yamada; Danielle McLean; Victoria C. Smith; Christopher Bronk Ramsey; Paul G. Albert; Richard A. Staff; Akiteru Yamasaki; Junko Kitagawa; Gordon Schlolaut; Katsuya Gotanda; Saki Sugo; Koki Takahashi; Atsumi Kitamura

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Environmental Science; Earth and Planetary Sciences

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