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Paleomagnetism of the southwestern U.S.A. recorded by 0-5 Ma igneous rocks

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Title Paleomagnetism of the southwestern U.S.A. recorded by 0-5 Ma igneous rocks
Names Tauxe, Lisa (creator)
Constable, Catherine (creator)
Johnson, Catherine L. (creator)
Koppers, Anthony A. P. (creator)
Miller, Winter R. (creator)
Staudigel, Hubert (creator)
Date Issued 2003-04-11 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract The issue of permanent nondipole contributions to the time-averaged field lies at the very heart of
paleomagnetism and the study of the ancient geomagnetic field. In this paper we focus on paleomagnetic
directional results from igneous rocks of the southwestern U.S.A. in the age range 0–5 Ma and investigate
both the time-averaged field and its variability about the mean value. Several decades of work in the
southwestern United States have resulted in the publication of paleomagnetic data from over 800
individual paleomagnetic sites. As part of a new investigation of the San Francisco Volcanics, we collected
paleomagnetic samples from 47 lava flows, many of which have been previously dated. The new data
combined with published data are highly scattered. Contributions to the scatter were considered, and we
find that removal of data sets from tectonically active areas and judicious selection according to Fisher’s
[1953] precision parameter results in an axially symmetric data distribution with normal and reverse modes
that are indistinguishable from antipodal. Monte Carlo simulations suggest that a minimum of 5 samples
per site are needed to estimate the precision parameter sufficiently accurately to allow its use as a
determinant of data quality. Numerical simulations from statistical paleosecular variation models indicate
the need for several hundred paleomagnetic sites to get an accurate determination of the average field
direction and are also used to investigate the directional bias that results from averaging unit vectors rather
than using the full field vector. Average directions for the southwestern U.S.A. show small deviations from
a geocentric axial dipole field, but these cannot be considered statistically significant. Virtual geomagnetic
pole (VGP) dispersions are consistent with those from globally distributed observations analyzed by
McElhinny and McFadden [1997]. However, a systematic investigation of the effect of imposing a cutoff
on VGPs with large deviations from the geographic axis indicates that while it may reduce bias in
calculating the average direction, such a procedure can result in severe underestimates of the variance in
the geomagnetic field. A more satisfactory solution would be to use an unbiased technique for joint
estimation of the mean direction and variance of the field distribution.
Genre Article
Topic paleosecular variation
Identifier Tauxe, L., C. Constable, C. L. Johnson, A. A. P. Koppers, W. R. Miller, and H. Staudigel, Paleomagnetism of the southwestern U.S.A. recorded by 0–5 Ma igneous rocks, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 4(4), 8802, 2003.

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