Geomagnetic Polarity Timescales and Reversal Frequency Regimes
Lowrie
William
author
Kent
Dennis V.
author
Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Columbia University. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
originator
text
Articles
2004
English
An analysis of geomagnetic reversal history is made for the most reliable polarity timescales covering the last 160 Myr. The timescale of Cande and Kent [1995] (CK95) is the optimum representation of Cenozoic and Late Cretaceous polarity history, and the timescale of Channell et al. [1995] (CENT94) best represents the Early Cretaceous and Late Jurassic. The CK95 timescale can be divided into two nearly linear segments at Chron C12r. The lengths of chrons in the younger segment have no systematic trend, and so this part of the polarity sequence is considered to be stationary for statistical analysis. The mean chron length is 0.248 Myr and the gamma index, k, for the distribution of chron lengths is 1.6 ± 0.4; inserting just 8 additional short subchrons that have been verified from magnetostratigraphic studies as polarity reversals reduces the mean chron length to 0.219 Myr and k to 1.3 ± 0.3. The older segment is stationary if the two long polarity chrons C33n and C33r adjacent to the Cretaceous Normal Polarity Superchron are omitted; in this case the mean chron length is 0.749 Myr and k is 1.2 ± 0.4. The chrons in the CENT94 timescale are stationary with mean length 0.415 Myr and k is 1.3 ± 0.3. The gamma indices of the chron distributions are not significantly different from a Poisson distribution (k = 1), which implies that the reversal process is essentially free of long-term memory. However, if the mean chron duration is an indicator of stability of the reversal process, it appears that long lasting episodes of stable behavior may be followed by abrupt change to another stable regime with a markedly different reversal frequency. There is no significant change of the gamma index from one regime to another although the mean polarity chron length changes by more than a factor of three. This would imply that the probability of a reversal may be constant within each regime but varies inversely with mean interval length from regime to regime.
Geology
Paleontology
Timescales of the Paleomagnetic Field
Channell
J. E. T.
editor
Kent
Dennis V.
editor
Lowrie
William
editor
Meert
J. G.
editor
Washington, D.C.
American Geophysical Union
1994
117
129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/145GM09
Geophysical Monograph
145
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:12319
NNC
NNC
2012-02-09 10:11:57 -0500
2012-11-20 16:59:20 -0500
6528
eng