AI Article Synopsis

  • U-channel sediment core sampling allows researchers to gather extensive paleomagnetic data over millions of years, but comes with limitations in resolving rapid geomagnetic changes.
  • U-channel measurements can average out small-scale reversals and excursions, potentially creating misleading data that doesn't accurately reflect the complexity of magnetic field variations.
  • A simulation of different magnetometer response functions shows that even minor changes can lead to significant differences in the resulting paleomagnetic records.

Article Abstract

Sampling of sediment cores using plastic U-channels has made possible the acquisition of detailed records of paleomagnetic secular variation, geomagnetic polarity, environmental magnetic studies, and relative paleointensity over the past several million years. U-channel measurements provide the great advantage of rapid measurements of long sediment cores, but the signal resolution is attenuated by the response function of the magnetometer sensors, which therefore restrains the recovery of rapid and large-amplitude field changes. Here we focus on the suitability of the dynamics of reversals and excursions derived from U-channel measurements. We compare successive individual paleomagnetic directions of 1.5 cm × 1.5 cm × 1.5 cm cubic discrete samples with those of a 1.5-m equivalent U-channel sample train obtained by placing the samples adjacent to each other. We use varying excursion and transition lengths and generate transitional directions that resemble those of the most detailed paleomagnetic records. Excursions with opposite polarity directions recorded over less than 7.5 cm are barely detected in U-channel measurements. Regarding reversals, U-channel measurements smooth the signal of low-resolution records and generate artificial transitional directions. Despite producing misleading similarities with the overall structure of transition records, longer transitional intervals fail also to reproduce the complexity of field changes. Finally, we test the convolution of magnetization by different response functions. The simulation reveals that even small response function changes can generate significant differences in results.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6360451PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2018GC007803DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • U-channel sediment core sampling allows researchers to gather extensive paleomagnetic data over millions of years, but comes with limitations in resolving rapid geomagnetic changes.
  • U-channel measurements can average out small-scale reversals and excursions, potentially creating misleading data that doesn't accurately reflect the complexity of magnetic field variations.
  • A simulation of different magnetometer response functions shows that even minor changes can lead to significant differences in the resulting paleomagnetic records.
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