Global changes in intensity of the Earth's magnetic field during the past 800kyr
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Publication date
1999-03-29
Authors
Guyodo, Yohan
Valet, Jean-Pierre
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DOI
Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Recent advances in palaeomagnetic and dating techniques have
led to increasingly precise records of the relative intensity of the
Earths past magnetic field at numerous field sites. The compilation
and analysis of these records can provide important constraints
on changes in global magnetic field intensity and
therefore on the Earth's geodynamo itself. A previous compilation
for the past 200 kyr integrated 17 marine records into a composite
curve1, with the geomagnetic origin of the signal supported by an
independent analysis of Be production made on different cores2.
The persistence of long-term features in the Earth's magnetic
intensity or the existence of long-term periodic changes cannot,
however, be resolved in this relatively short time span. Here we
present the integration of 33 records of relative palaeointensity
into a composite curve spanning the past 800 kyr.We find that the
intensity of the Earth's dipole field has experienced large-amplitude
variations over this time period with pronounced intensity
minima coinciding with known excursions in field direction,
reflecting the emergence of non-dipole components. No stable
periodicity was found in our composite record and therefore our
data set does not support the hypothesis that the Earth's orbital
parameters have a direct and strong influence on the geodynamo.