scholarly journals High-latitude paleomagnetic poles from Middle Jurassic Plutons and moat volcanics in New England and the controversy regarding Jurassic Apparent Polar Wander for North America

1990 ◽  
Vol 95 (B11) ◽  
pp. 17503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mickey C. Van Fossen ◽  
Dennis V. Kent

The palaeomagnetic record of continental drift during the Proterozoic is reasonably complete for North America (including Greenland and the Baltic Shield), less complete for Africa and Australia, and fragmentary elsewhere. Palaeomagnetic poles of similar age from different cratons or structural provinces of any one continent tend to fall on a common apparent polar wander path (a.p.w.p.), indicating no major (> 1000 km) intercratonic movements. On this evidence, Proterozoic orogens and mobile belts are essentially ensialic in origin. However, the palaeomagnetic record has systematic gaps. In highly metamorphosed orogens (amphibolite grade and above), remagnetization dating from post-orogenic uplift and cooling is pervasive. Collisional and ensialic orogenesis cannot then be distinguished. Palaeopoles from different continents do not follow a common a.p.w.p. They record large relative rotations and palaeolatitude shifts. A recurrent pattern appears in the late Proterozoic drift of North America. At approximately 200 Ma intervals (at about 1250, 1050, 850 and 600 Ma B.P .), the continent returned to the same orientation and (equatorial) latitudes from various rotations and high-latitude excursions. Lacking detailed a.p.w.ps. from other continents, it is not possible to say if these motions represent Wilson cycles of ocean opening and closing in the Phanerozoic style, but they do require minimum drift rates of 50—60 mm/a, comparable to the most rapid present-day plate velocities.


1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chad McCabe ◽  
Rob Van der Voo

Two components of magnetization have been isolated from Chequamegon Sandstone samples using chemical demagnetization. A characteristic magnetization resides in magnetite of detrital origin. The pole calculated from this magnetization is 12.3°S, 177.7°E (K = 111.5, A95 = 4.6°). This pole lies with other poles of late Keweenawan age and is very close to the Jacobsville Sandstone poles. A secondary magnetization resides in authigenic hematite and yields a pole close to the present north pole. This high-latitude pole is known from an earlier study of the Chequamegon and has been used as evidence for the Hadrynian APW track. However, most if not all of the high-latitude poles that define the Hadrynian track are secondary and undated. Our preferred alternative to the Hadrynian track is that the high-latitude poles are recent remagnetizations and that the antipodal equatorial poles that mark its end points represent field reversals.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Wang

Angiosperms are the single most important plant group in the current ecosystem. However, little is known about the origin and early evolution of angiosperms. Jurassic and earlier traces of angiosperms have been claimed multiple times from Europe and Asia, but reluctance to accept these records remains. To test the truthfulness of these claims, palaeobotanical records from continents other than Europe and Asia constitute a crucial test. Here I document a new angiosperm fruit, Dilcherifructus mexicana gen. et sp. nov, from the Middle Jurassic of Mexico. Its Jurassic age suggests that origin of angiosperms is much earlier than widely accepted, while its occurrence in the North America indicates that angiosperms were already widespread in the Jurassic, although they were still far away from their ecological radiation, which started in the Early Cretaceous.


2013 ◽  
Vol 78 (3) ◽  
pp. 520-535 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duncan Caldwell

AbstractWith one exception, which has been described as a suspended “kiva bell,” long stone rods have been interpreted throughout the archaeological literature of North America as whetstones or pestles. Two particularly long rods in a collection of prehistoric artifacts from New England raise questions as to the real use of some of these objects. The prevailing interpretations of the two artifacts may be incorrect, or at least incomplete, because the rods lack the kinds of wear that are found on most whetstones or pestles. They also have different acoustical properties from true pestles, which are usually shorter, and are identical in materials, acoustics, and form to probable prehistoric lithophones from the Old World, which can be played on the lap. The identification of the pair of rods as good candidates for being the first known cylindrical, two-toned prehistoric lithophones from New England introduces a new avenue for the study of fossil sounds and rituals in both the region and continent because it is likely that similar artifacts will be examined for characteristic wear, tested acoustically, and recognized as the objects of prestige and ceremony that they may have been in their role as un-suspended musical instruments.


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