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The influence of high-latitude flux lobes on the Holocene paleomagnetic record of IODP Site U1305 and the northern North Atlantic

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Title The influence of high-latitude flux lobes on the Holocene paleomagnetic record of IODP Site U1305 and the northern North Atlantic
Names Stoner, Joseph S. (creator)
Channell, James E. T. (creator)
Mazaud, Alain (creator)
Strano, Sarah E. (creator)
Xuan, Chuang (creator)
Date Issued 2013-10-18 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Geophysical Union and can be found at: http://www.agu.org/journals/gc/.
Abstract Paleomagnetic analysis and radiocarbon dating of an expanded Holocene deep-sea sediment sequence
recovered by Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 303 from Labrador Sea Site U1305
(Lat.: 57°28.5 N, Long.: 48°31.8 W, water depth 3459 m) provides insights into mechanisms that drive
both paleomagnetic secular variation (PSV) and magnetization acquisition in deep-sea sediments.
Seventeen radiocarbon dates on planktonic foraminifera define postglacial (ca. 8 ka) sedimentation rates
as ranging from 35 to >90 cm/kyr. Alternating field (AF) demagnetization of u-channel samples show
that these homogeneous sediments preserve a strong, stable, and consistently well-defined component
magnetization. Normalized remanence records pass reliability criteria for relative paleointensity (RPI)
estimates. Assuming that the age of magnetization is most accurately defined by well dated PSV records
with the highest sedimentation rates, allows us to estimate and correct for temporal offsets at Site U1305
interpreted to result from postdepositional remanence acquisition at a depth of ~20 cm. Comparisons
indicate that the northern North Atlantic PSV and RPI records are more consistent with European than
North American records, and the evolution of virtual geomagnetic poles (VGP) are temporally and
longitudinally similar to global reconstructions, though with much larger latitudinal variation. The largest
deviations from a geocentric axial dipole (GAD) are observed during times of the highest intensities, in
contrast to the usual assumption. These observations are consistent with the idea that PSV in the North
Atlantic and elsewhere during the Holocene results from temporal oscillations of high-latitude flux
concentrations at a few recurrent locations.
Genre Article
Topic Paleomagnetism
Identifier Stoner, J. S., J. E. T. Channell, A. Mazaud, S. E. Strano, and C. Xuan (2013), The influence of high-latitude flux lobes on the Holocene paleomagnetic record of IODP Site U1305 and the northern North Atlantic, Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems, 14, 4623–4646. doi:10.1002/ggge.20272

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