Paleomagnetic Secular Variation Time Constraints on Late Neogene Geological Events in Slope Sediment from the Eastern Tyrrhenian Sea

Author(s):  
MARINA IORIO ◽  
JOSEPH C. LIDDICOAT ◽  
FRANCESCA BUDILLON ◽  
PASQUALE TIANO ◽  
ALBERTO INCORONATO ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 117 (B7) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Anita Di Chiara ◽  
Fabio Speranza ◽  
Massimiliano Porreca

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas P. Steen ◽  
Joseph S. Stoner ◽  
Jason P. Briner ◽  
Darrell S. Kaufman

Abstract. Two > 5-m-long sediment cores from Cascade Lake (68.38° N, 154.60° W), Arctic Alaska, were analyzed to quantify their paleomagnetic properties over the past 21,000 years. Alternating-field demagnetization of the natural remanent magnetization, anhysteretic remanent magnetization, isothermal remanent magnetization, and hysteresis experiments reveal a strong, well-defined characteristic remanent magnetization carried by a low coercivity magnetic component that increases up core. Maximum angular deviation values average < 2°, and average inclination values are within 4° of the geocentric axial dipole prediction. Radiometric ages based on 210Pb and 14C were used to correlate the major inclination features of the resulting paleomagnetic secular variation (PSV) record with those of other regional PSV records, including two geomagnetic field models and the longer series from Burial Lake, located 200 km to the west. Following around 6 ka (cal BP), the ages of PSV fluctuations in Cascade Lake begin to diverge from those of the regional records, reaching a maximum offset of about 2000 years at around 4 ka. Several correlated cryptotephra ages from this section (reported in a companion paper by Davies et al., this volume) support the regional PSV-based chronology and indicate that some of the 14C ages at Cascade Lake are variably too old.


2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 538-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Sánchez-Duque ◽  
V. Mejia ◽  
N. D. Opdyke ◽  
K. Huang ◽  
A. Rosales-Rivera

1997 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph C. Liddicoat ◽  
Robert S. Coe

AbstractA comparison of paleomagnetic secular variation in sediment of Pleistocene Lake Lahontan in the northwestern Great Basin with secular variation in lake sediment in the Mono Basin, California, indicates that Lake Lahontan was in the valley of the Truckee River between Pyramid Lake and Wadsworth, Nevada, from about 19,000 to 13,000 yr B.P. The secular variation in older Lake Lahontan sediment in the Truckee River valley has the general features of secular variation in middle Pleistocene lacustrine sediments near Rye Patch Dam, Nevada, 125 km to the east. On the basis of field mapping and tephrochronology, the sections of older lacustrine sediments are not coeval. The apparent, but erroneous, correlation of those sediments emphasizes the need for multiple dating methods when paleomagnetic secular variation is used to date stratigraphy.


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