Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions

Paleogeographic reconstructions largely rely on paleomagnetic data, mostly in the form of paleomagnetic poles. Compilations of poles are used to determine so called apparent polar wander paths (APWPs), which capture the motion through time of a particular location with respect to an absolute referen...

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Main Authors: Edoardo Dallanave, Uwe Kirscher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592277/full
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spelling doaj-b4b25887a19246edb3a314094b8045802020-12-23T05:12:04ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632020-12-01810.3389/feart.2020.592277592277Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic ReconstructionsEdoardo Dallanave0Uwe Kirscher1Faculty of Geosciences, University of Bremen, Bremen, GermanyDepartment of Geosciences, University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, GermanyPaleogeographic reconstructions largely rely on paleomagnetic data, mostly in the form of paleomagnetic poles. Compilations of poles are used to determine so called apparent polar wander paths (APWPs), which capture the motion through time of a particular location with respect to an absolute reference frame such as the Earth’s spin axis. Paleomagnetic datasets from sedimentary rocks are particularly relevant, because of their spatial distribution and temporal continuity. Several criteria have been proposed through the years to assess the reliability of paleomagnetic datasets. Among these, the latitudinal-dependent elongation of a given paleomagnetic directions distribution, predicted by a widely accepted paleosecular variations model, has been applied so far only to investigate inclination flattening commonly observed in sedimentary rocks. We show in this work that this concept can be generalized to detect “contamination” of paleomagnetic data derived from tectonic strain, which is not always detected by field observation only. After generating different sets of simulated geomagnetic directions at different latitudes, we monitored the variations in the shape of the distributions after applying deformation tensors that replicate the effect of increasing tectonic strain. We show that, in most cases, the “deformation” of the dataset can be detected by elongation vs. inclination ratios not conforming to the values predicted by the paleosecular variations model. Recently acquired paleomagnetic directions and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS; a parameter very sensitive to tectonic strain) data from New Caledonia verifies the results of these simulations and highlights the importance of measuring AMS when using sedimentary paleomagnetic data for paleogeographic reconstruction. We suggest to include always AMS measurement and analysis of the distribution shape to assess sedimentary paleomagnetic data used for paleogeographic reconstructions.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592277/fullpaleomagnetic directionsTK03.GADfinite strainpaleogeographic reconstructionanisotropy of magnetic susceptability (AMS)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edoardo Dallanave
Uwe Kirscher
spellingShingle Edoardo Dallanave
Uwe Kirscher
Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
Frontiers in Earth Science
paleomagnetic directions
TK03.GAD
finite strain
paleogeographic reconstruction
anisotropy of magnetic susceptability (AMS)
author_facet Edoardo Dallanave
Uwe Kirscher
author_sort Edoardo Dallanave
title Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
title_short Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
title_full Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
title_fullStr Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
title_full_unstemmed Testing the Reliability of Sedimentary Paleomagnetic Datasets for Paleogeographic Reconstructions
title_sort testing the reliability of sedimentary paleomagnetic datasets for paleogeographic reconstructions
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Paleogeographic reconstructions largely rely on paleomagnetic data, mostly in the form of paleomagnetic poles. Compilations of poles are used to determine so called apparent polar wander paths (APWPs), which capture the motion through time of a particular location with respect to an absolute reference frame such as the Earth’s spin axis. Paleomagnetic datasets from sedimentary rocks are particularly relevant, because of their spatial distribution and temporal continuity. Several criteria have been proposed through the years to assess the reliability of paleomagnetic datasets. Among these, the latitudinal-dependent elongation of a given paleomagnetic directions distribution, predicted by a widely accepted paleosecular variations model, has been applied so far only to investigate inclination flattening commonly observed in sedimentary rocks. We show in this work that this concept can be generalized to detect “contamination” of paleomagnetic data derived from tectonic strain, which is not always detected by field observation only. After generating different sets of simulated geomagnetic directions at different latitudes, we monitored the variations in the shape of the distributions after applying deformation tensors that replicate the effect of increasing tectonic strain. We show that, in most cases, the “deformation” of the dataset can be detected by elongation vs. inclination ratios not conforming to the values predicted by the paleosecular variations model. Recently acquired paleomagnetic directions and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS; a parameter very sensitive to tectonic strain) data from New Caledonia verifies the results of these simulations and highlights the importance of measuring AMS when using sedimentary paleomagnetic data for paleogeographic reconstruction. We suggest to include always AMS measurement and analysis of the distribution shape to assess sedimentary paleomagnetic data used for paleogeographic reconstructions.
topic paleomagnetic directions
TK03.GAD
finite strain
paleogeographic reconstruction
anisotropy of magnetic susceptability (AMS)
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.592277/full
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