Results 91 to 100 of about 166 (116)
Assimilation of geomagnetic data into dynamo models, an archeomagnetic study
Le champ magnétique mesuré à la surface de la Terre résulte de la superposition de plusieurs sources, dont la principale est celle du noyau. Le champ magnétique du noyau terrestre est généré par une dynamo naturelle qui évolue sur différentes échelles de temps.
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Recent Advances in Chinese Archeomagnetism
Cai, Shuhui,; Tauxe, Lisa,; Paterson, Greig A,; Deng, Chenglong,; Pan, Yongxin,; Qin, Huafeng,; Zhu, Rixiang,
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Archeomagnetism of a 19th century pottery kiln near Jordan, Ontario
The Jordan pottery kiln near St. Catharines, Ontario, was last fired about 1840–1841. Bricks from the kiln floor have intense NRM's (natural remanent magnetizations) in the range 0.2 × 10−2 to 3.7 × 10−2 emu cm−3 which are directionally stable against alternating field (AF) demagnetization to 1000 Oe (7.96 × 104 A/m).
David J. Dunlop, Murray B. Zinn
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A reappraisal of instrumental magnetic measurements made in Western Europe before AD 1750: confronting historical geomagnetism and archeomagnetism [PDF]
International audienceWe present a new compilation and analysis of historical geomagnetic measurements made in Western Europe beforeAD 1750. The dataset in its ensemble provides a coherent evolution of magnetic field directions.
Maxime Le Goff, Yves Gallet
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On archeomagnetic secular variation curves and archeomagnetic dating
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 2002Abstract Secular variation (SV) of the Earth’s magnetic field can be used for dating purposes by comparing archeomagnetic directions of unknown ages with a well-dated reference curve. In this study, we propose a dating technique based on the statistics of McFadden and McElhinny [Geophys. J. Int.
Maxime Le Goff +3 more
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