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[[File:Geomagnetic polarity late Cenozoic.svg|right|thumb|285px|Geomagnetic polarity during the last 5 million years ([[Pliocene]] and [[Quaternary]], late [[Cenozoic Era]]). Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's normal polarity; light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed.]]
[[File:Geomagnetic polarity late Cenozoic.svg|right|thumb|285px|Geomagnetic polarity during the last 5 million years ([[Pliocene]] and [[Quaternary]], late [[Cenozoic Era]]). Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's normal polarity; light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed.]]


A '''geomagnetic reversal''' is a change in a planet's [[Earth's magnetic field|magnetic field]] such that the positions of [[magnetic north]] and [[magnetic south]] are interchanged (not to be confused with [[north pole|geographic north]] and [[south pole|geographic south]]). The [[Earth]]'s field has alternated between periods of ''normal'' polarity, in which the predominant direction of the field was the same as the present direction, and ''reverse'' polarity, in which it was the opposite. These periods are called ''[[polarity chron|chrons]]''.
A '''geomagnetic reversal''' is a change in a planet's [[Dipole magnet|dipole magnetic field]] such that the positions of [[magnetic north]] and [[magnetic south]] are interchanged (not to be confused with [[North Pole|geographic north]] and [[South Pole|geographic south]]). The [[Earth's magnetic field]] has alternated between periods of ''normal'' polarity, in which the predominant direction of the field was the same as the present direction, and ''reverse'' polarity, in which it was the opposite. These periods are called ''[[polarity chron|chrons]]''.


Reversal occurrences are statistically random. There have been at least 183 reversals over the last 83 million years (on average once every ~450,000 years). The latest, the [[Brunhes–Matuyama reversal]], occurred 780,000 years ago,<ref name="AT-20190811">{{cite news |last=Johnson |first=Scott K. |title=The last magnetic pole flip saw 22,000 years of weirdness – When the Earth's magnetic poles trade places, they take a while to get sorted. |url=https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/08/the-last-magnetic-pole-flip-saw-22000-years-of-weirdness/ |date=11 August 2019 |work=[[Ars Technica]] |access-date=11 August 2019 }}</ref> with widely varying estimates of how quickly it happened. Other sources estimate that the time that it takes for a reversal to complete is on average around 7,000 years for the four most recent reversals.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Clement|first=Bradford M.|date=2004|title=Dependence of the duration of geomagnetic polarity reversals on site latitude|journal=Nature|language=en|volume=428|issue=6983|pages=637–640|doi=10.1038/nature02459|pmid=15071591|bibcode=2004Natur.428..637C|s2cid=4356044|issn=0028-0836}}</ref> Clement (2004) suggests that this duration is dependent on latitude, with shorter durations at low latitudes, and longer durations at mid and high latitudes.<ref name=":0" /> Although variable, the duration of a full reversal is typically between 2,000 and 12,000 years.<ref>{{Citation|last1=Glatzmaier|first1=G.A.|title=Magnetic Polarity Reversals in the Core|date=2015|work=Treatise on Geophysics|pages=279–295|publisher=Elsevier|language=en|doi=10.1016/b978-0-444-53802-4.00146-9|isbn=978-0444538031|last2=Coe|first2=R.S.}}</ref>
Reversal occurrences are statistically random. There have been at least 183 reversals over the last 83 million years (on average once every ~450,000 years). The latest, the [[Brunhes–Matuyama reversal]], occurred 780,000 years ago<ref name="AT-20190811"/> with widely varying estimates of how quickly it happened. Other sources estimate that the time that it takes for a reversal to complete is on average around 7,000 years for the four most recent reversals.<ref name=":0"/> Clement (2004) suggests that this duration is dependent on latitude, with shorter durations at low latitudes and longer durations at mid and high latitudes.<ref name=":0" /> The duration of a full reversal varies between 2,000 and 12,000 years.<ref name="glatzmaier2015"/>


Although there have been periods in which the field reversed globally (such as the [[Laschamp event|Laschamp excursion]]) for several hundred years,<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Nowaczyk|first1=N.R.|last2=Arz|first2=H.W.|last3=Frank|first3=U.|last4=Kind|first4=J.|last5=Plessen|first5=B.|date=2012|title=Dynamics of the Laschamp geomagnetic excursion from Black Sea sediments|journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters|language=en|volume=351–352|pages=54–69|doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2012.06.050|bibcode=2012E&PSL.351...54N}}</ref> these events are classified as excursions rather than full geomagnetic reversals. Stable polarity chrons often show large, rapid directional excursions, which occur more often than reversals, and could be seen as failed reversals. During such an excursion, the field reverses in the liquid [[outer core]], but not in the solid [[inner core]]. Diffusion in the liquid outer core is on timescales of 500 years or less, while that of the solid inner core is longer, around 3,000 years.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Gubbins |first=David |date=1999|title=The distinction between geomagnetic excursions and reversals |journal=Geophysical Journal International|language=en|volume=137|issue=1|pages=F1–F4|doi=10.1046/j.1365-246x.1999.00810.x|doi-access=free}}</ref>
Although there have been periods in which the field reversed globally (such as the [[Laschamp event|Laschamp excursion]]) for several hundred years,<ref name="nowaczyk2012"/> these events are classified as excursions rather than full geomagnetic reversals. Stable polarity chrons often show large, rapid directional excursions, which occur more often than reversals, and could be seen as failed reversals. During such an excursion, the field reverses in the liquid [[Earth's outer core|outer core]] but not in the solid [[Earth's inner core|inner core]]. Diffusion in the outer core is on timescales of 500 years or less while that of the inner core is longer, around 3,000 years.<ref name="gubbins1999"/>


==History==
==History==
In the early 20th century, geologists such as [[Bernard Brunhes]] first noticed that some volcanic rocks were magnetized opposite to the direction of the local Earth's field. The first systematic evidence for and time-scale estimate of the magnetic reversals were made by [[Motonori Matuyama]] in the late 1920s; he observed that rocks with reversed fields were all of early [[Pleistocene]] age or older. At the time, the Earth's polarity was poorly understood, and the possibility of reversal aroused little interest.<ref name=Cox1973>{{cite book|last=Cox|first=Allan|author-link=Allan V. Cox|title=Plate tectonics and geomagnetic reversal|publisher=W. H. Freeman|date=1973|location=San Francisco, California|pages=138–145, 222–228|isbn=0-7167-0258-4}}</ref><ref name=Glen>{{cite book|last=Glen|first=William|title=The Road to Jaramillo: Critical Years of the Revolution in Earth Science|publisher=[[Stanford University Press]]|date=1982|isbn=0-8047-1119-4|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/roadtojaramilloc00glen}}</ref>
In the early 20th century, geologists such as [[Bernard Brunhes]] first noticed that some volcanic rocks were magnetized opposite to the direction of the local Earth's field. The first systematic evidence for and time-scale estimate of the magnetic reversals were made by [[Motonori Matuyama]] in the late 1920s; he observed that rocks with reversed fields were all of early [[Pleistocene]] age or older. At the time, the Earth's polarity was poorly understood, and the possibility of reversal aroused little interest.<ref name=Cox1973/><ref name=Glen/>


Three decades later, when Earth's magnetic field was better understood, theories were advanced suggesting that the Earth's field might have reversed in the remote past. Most paleomagnetic research in the late 1950s included an examination of the wandering of the poles and [[continental drift]]. Although it was discovered that some rocks would reverse their magnetic field while cooling, it became apparent that most magnetized volcanic rocks preserved traces of the Earth's magnetic field at the time the rocks had cooled. In the absence of reliable methods for obtaining absolute ages for rocks, it was thought that reversals occurred approximately every million years.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>
Three decades later, when [[Earth's magnetic field]] was better understood, theories were advanced suggesting that the Earth's field might have reversed in the remote past. Most paleomagnetic research in the late 1950s included an examination of the wandering of the poles and [[continental drift]]. Although it was discovered that some rocks would reverse their magnetic field while cooling, it became apparent that most magnetized volcanic rocks preserved traces of the Earth's magnetic field at the time the rocks had cooled. In the absence of reliable methods for obtaining absolute ages for rocks, it was thought that reversals occurred approximately every million years.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>


The next major advance in understanding reversals came when techniques for [[radiometric dating]] were improved in the 1950s. [[Allan V. Cox|Allan Cox]] and [[Richard Doell]], at the [[United States Geological Survey]], wanted to know whether reversals occurred at regular intervals, and invited the geochronologist [[Brent Dalrymple]] to join their group. They produced the first magnetic-polarity time scale in 1959. As they accumulated data, they continued to refine this scale in competition with Don Tarling and [[Ian McDougall (geologist)|Ian McDougall]] at the [[Australian National University]]. A group led by [[Neil D. Opdyke|Neil Opdyke]] at the [[Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory]] showed that the same pattern of reversals was recorded in sediments from deep-sea cores.<ref name=Glen/>
The next major advance in understanding reversals came when techniques for [[radiometric dating]] were improved in the 1950s. [[Allan V. Cox|Allan Cox]] and [[Richard Doell]], at the [[United States Geological Survey]], wanted to know whether reversals occurred at regular intervals, and they invited geochronologist [[Brent Dalrymple]] to join their group. They produced the first magnetic-polarity time scale in 1959. As they accumulated data, they continued to refine this scale in competition with Don Tarling and [[Ian McDougall (geologist)|Ian McDougall]] at the [[Australian National University]]. A group led by [[Neil D. Opdyke|Neil Opdyke]] at the [[Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory]] showed that the same pattern of reversals was recorded in sediments from deep-sea cores.<ref name=Glen/>


During the 1950s and 1960s information about variations in the Earth's magnetic field was gathered largely by means of research vessels, but the complex routes of ocean cruises rendered the association of navigational data with [[magnetometer]] readings difficult. Only when data were plotted on a map did it become apparent that remarkably regular and continuous magnetic stripes appeared on the ocean floors.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>
During the 1950s and 1960s information about variations in the Earth's magnetic field was gathered largely by means of research vessels, but the complex routes of ocean cruises rendered the association of navigational data with [[magnetometer]] readings difficult. Only when data were plotted on a map did it become apparent that remarkably regular and continuous magnetic stripes appeared on the ocean floors.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>
[[File:Oceanic.Stripe.Magnetic.Anomalies.Scheme.svg|thumb|]]
[[File:Oceanic.Stripe.Magnetic.Anomalies.Scheme.svg|thumb]]
In 1963, [[Frederick Vine]] and [[Drummond Matthews]] provided a simple explanation by combining the [[seafloor spreading]] theory of [[Harry Hammond Hess|Harry Hess]] with the known time scale of reversals: new sea floor is magnetized in the direction of the then-current field. Thus, sea floor spreading from a central ridge will produce pairs of magnetic stripes parallel to the ridge.<ref name=vine1963>{{cite journal|title=Magnetic Anomalies over Oceanic Ridges|journal= Nature|date=1963|first=Frederick J.|last=Vine|author2=Drummond H. Matthews|volume=199|issue=4897|pages=947–949|doi= 10.1038/199947a0|bibcode=1963Natur.199..947V|s2cid= 4296143}}</ref> Canadian [[Lawrence Morley|L. W. Morley]] independently proposed a similar explanation in January 1963, but his work was rejected by the scientific journals ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' and ''[[Journal of Geophysical Research]]'', and remained unpublished until 1967, when it appeared in the literary magazine ''[[Saturday Review (US magazine)|Saturday Review]]''.<ref name= Cox1973/> The [[Morley–Vine–Matthews hypothesis]] was the first key scientific test of the seafloor spreading theory of continental drift.<ref name=Glen/>
In 1963, [[Frederick Vine]] and [[Drummond Matthews]] provided a simple explanation by combining the [[seafloor spreading]] theory of [[Harry Hammond Hess|Harry Hess]] with the known time scale of reversals: sea floor rock is magnetized in the direction of the field when it is formed. Thus, sea floor spreading from a central ridge will produce pairs of magnetic stripes parallel to the ridge.<ref name=vine1963/> Canadian [[Lawrence Morley|L. W. Morley]] independently proposed a similar explanation in January 1963, but his work was rejected by the scientific journals ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' and ''[[Journal of Geophysical Research]]'', and remained unpublished until 1967, when it appeared in the literary magazine ''[[Saturday Review (US magazine)|Saturday Review]]''.<ref name= Cox1973/> The [[Morley–Vine–Matthews hypothesis]] was the first key scientific test of the seafloor spreading theory of continental drift.<ref name=Glen/>


Beginning in 1966, Lamont–Doherty Geological Observatory scientists found that the magnetic profiles across the [[Pacific-Antarctic Ridge]] were symmetrical and matched the pattern in the north Atlantic's [[Reykjanes Ridge|Reykjanes ridge]]. The same magnetic anomalies were found over most of the world's oceans, which permitted estimates for when most of the oceanic crust had developed.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>
Past field reversals are recorded in the solidified [[Ferrimagnetism|ferrimagnetic]] minerals of consolidated sedimentary deposits or cooled [[Volcano|volcanic]] flows on land. Beginning in 1966, Lamont–Doherty Geological Observatory scientists found that the magnetic profiles across the [[Pacific-Antarctic Ridge]] were symmetrical and matched the pattern in the north Atlantic's [[Reykjanes Ridge|Reykjanes ridge]]. The same magnetic anomalies were found over most of the world's oceans, which permitted estimates for when most of the [[oceanic crust]] had developed.<ref name=Cox1973 /><ref name=Glen/>


==Observing past fields==
==Observing past fields==
[[File:Geomagnetic polarity 0-169 Ma.svg|thumb|left|upright=0.6|Geomagnetic polarity since the middle [[Jurassic]]. Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's polarity, while light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed. The ''Cretaceous Normal'' superchron is visible as the broad, uninterrupted black band near the middle of the image.]]
[[File:Geomagnetic polarity 0-169 Ma.svg|thumb|left|upright=0.6|Geomagnetic polarity since the middle [[Jurassic]]. Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's polarity, while light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed. The ''Cretaceous Normal'' superchron is visible as the broad, uninterrupted black band near the middle of the image.]]
Because no existing unsubducted sea floor (or [[ophiolites|sea floor thrust onto continental plates]]) is more than about {{mya|180|million years}} ([[Ma (unit)|Ma]]) old, other methods are necessary for detecting older reversals. Most [[sedimentary rock]]s incorporate minute amounts of iron-rich [[mineral]]s, whose orientation is influenced by the ambient magnetic field at the time at which they formed. These rocks can preserve a record of the field if it is not later erased by [[Diagenesis|chemical, physical or biological change]].
Past field reversals are recorded in the "frozen" [[Ferromagnetism|ferromagnetic]] (more accurately [[Ferrimagnetism|ferrimagnetic]]) minerals of consolidated sedimentary deposits or cooled [[Volcano|volcanic]] flows on land.


Because Earth's magnetic field is a global phenomenon, similar patterns of magnetic variations at different sites may be used to help calculate age in different locations. The past four decades of paleomagnetic data about seafloor ages (up to ~{{mya|250| Ma}}) has been useful in estimating the age of geologic sections elsewhere. While not an independent dating method, it depends on "absolute" age dating methods like radioisotopic systems to derive numeric ages. It has become especially useful when studying [[Metamorphic rock|metamorphic]] and [[igneous rock]] formations where [[index fossil]]s are seldom available.
The past record of geomagnetic reversals was first noticed by observing the magnetic stripe "anomalies" on the [[Oceanic crust|ocean floor]]. [[Lawrence Morley|Lawrence W. Morley]], [[Fred Vine|Frederick John Vine]] and [[Drummond Matthews|Drummond Hoyle Matthews]] made the connection to seafloor spreading in the [[Morley–Vine–Matthews hypothesis]]<ref name= vine1963/><ref>{{cite journal|last=Morley|first=Lawrence W.|author2=A. Larochelle|date=1964|title=Paleomagnetism as a means of dating geological events|series=Special|journal=Geochronology in Canada|publisher=Royal Society of Canada|volume=Publication 8|pages=39–50|doi=10.3138/9781487586041-007|isbn=9781487586041|doi-access=free}}</ref> which soon led to the development of the theory of [[plate tectonics]]. The relatively constant rate at which the [[Seafloor spreading|sea floor]] spreads results in substrate "stripes" from which past magnetic field polarity can be inferred from a [[magnetometer]] towed along the sea floor.

Because no existing unsubducted sea floor (or [[ophiolites|sea floor thrust onto continental plates]]) is more than about {{mya|180|million years}} ([[Ma (unit)|Ma]]) old, other methods are necessary for detecting older reversals. Most [[sedimentary rock]]s incorporate tiny amounts of iron rich [[mineral]]s, whose orientation is influenced by the ambient magnetic field at the time at which they formed. These rocks can preserve a record of the field if it is not later erased by [[Diagenesis|chemical, physical or biological change]].

Because Earth's magnetic field is a global phenomenon, similar patterns of magnetic variations at different sites may be used to help calculate age in different locations. The past four decades of paleomagnetic data about seafloor ages (up to ~{{mya|250| Ma}}) has been useful in estimating the age of geologic sections elsewhere. While not an independent dating method, it depends on "absolute" age dating methods like radioisotopic systems to derive numeric ages. It has become especially useful to metamorphic and igneous geologists where [[index fossil]]s are seldom available.


==Geomagnetic polarity time scale==
==Geomagnetic polarity time scale==
{{further|Magnetostratigraphy}}
{{further|Magnetostratigraphy}}


Through analysis of seafloor magnetic anomalies and dating of reversal sequences on land, paleomagnetists have been developing a ''Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale'' (GPTS). The current time scale contains 184 polarity intervals in the last 83{{nbsp}}million years (and therefore 183 reversals).<ref name=Cande>{{cite journal|doi=10.1029/94JB03098|last1=Cande|first1=S. C.|last2=Kent|first2=D. V.|title=Revised calibration of the geomagnetic polarity timescale for the late Cretaceous and Cenozoic|journal=[[Journal of Geophysical Research]]|volume=100|issue=B4|pages=6093–6095|date=1995|bibcode=1995JGR...100.6093C}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://deeptow.whoi.edu/gpts.html|title=Geomagnetic Polarity Timescale|publisher=[[Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]]|work=Ocean Bottom Magnetometry Laboratory|access-date=March 23, 2011}}</ref>
Through analysis of seafloor magnetic anomalies and dating of reversal sequences on land, paleomagnetists have been developing a ''Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale''. The current time scale contains 184 polarity intervals in the last 83{{nbsp}}million years (and therefore 183 reversals).<ref name=Cande/><ref name="deeptow"/>


===Changing frequency over time===
===Changing frequency over time===
The rate of reversals in the Earth's magnetic field has varied widely over time. {{mya|72|million years ago (Ma)}}, the field reversed 5 times in a million years. In a 4-million-year period centered on {{mya|54| Ma}}, there were 10 reversals; at around {{mya|42| Ma}}, 17 reversals took place in the span of 3{{nbsp}}million years. In a period of 3{{nbsp}}million years centering on {{mya|24| Ma}}, 13 reversals occurred. No fewer than 51 reversals occurred in a 12-million-year period, centering on {{mya|15}}. Two reversals occurred during a span of 50,000 years. These eras of frequent reversals have been counterbalanced by a few "superchrons" long periods when no reversals took place.<ref>{{cite journal|date=2001-03-02|title=When the Compass Stopped Reversing Its Poles|journal=[[Science (journal)|Science]]|publisher=[[American Association for the Advancement of Science]]|volume=291|issue=5509|pages=1714–1715|doi=10.1126/science.291.5509.1714 |last=Banerjee|first=Subir K.|pmid=11253196|s2cid=140556706}}</ref>
The rate of reversals in the Earth's magnetic field has varied widely over time. Around {{mya|72|Ma}}, the field reversed 5 times in a million years. In a 4-million-year period centered on {{mya|54| Ma}}, there were 10 reversals; at around {{mya|42| Ma}}, 17 reversals took place in the span of 3{{nbsp}}million years. In a period of 3{{nbsp}}million years centering on {{mya|24| Ma}}, 13 reversals occurred. No fewer than 51 reversals occurred in a 12-million-year period, centering on {{mya|15|Ma}}. Two reversals occurred during a span of 50,000 years. These eras of frequent reversals have been counterbalanced by a few "superchrons": long periods when no reversals took place.<ref name="banerjee2001"/>


===Superchrons===
===Superchrons===
A ''superchron'' is a polarity interval lasting at least 10{{nbsp}}million years. There are two well-established superchrons, the [[Cretaceous Normal]] and the Kiaman. A third candidate, the Moyero, is more controversial. The Jurassic Quiet Zone in ocean magnetic anomalies was once thought to represent a superchron, but is now attributed to other causes.
A ''superchron'' is a polarity interval lasting at least 10{{nbsp}}million years. There are two well-established superchrons, the [[Cretaceous Normal]] and the Kiaman. A third candidate, the Moyero, is more controversial. The Jurassic Quiet Zone in ocean magnetic anomalies was once thought to represent a superchron but is now attributed to other causes.


The ''Cretaceous Normal'' (also called the ''Cretaceous Superchron'' or C34) lasted for almost 40{{nbsp}}million years, from about {{mya|120|83}}, including stages of the [[Cretaceous]] period from the [[Aptian]] through the [[Santonian]]. The frequency of magnetic reversals steadily decreased prior to the period, reaching its low point (no reversals) during the period. Between the Cretaceous Normal and the present, the frequency has generally increased slowly.<ref name=Merrill>{{cite book|last1=Merrill|first1= Ronald T.|last2=McElhinny|first2=Michael W.|last3=McFadden|first3=Phillip L.|title=The magnetic field of the earth: paleomagnetism, the core, and the deep mantle|publisher=[[Academic Press]]|date=1998|isbn=978-0-12-491246-5}}</ref>
The ''Cretaceous Normal'' (also called the ''Cretaceous Superchron'' or C34) lasted for almost 40{{nbsp}}million years, from about {{mya|120|83}}, including stages of the [[Cretaceous]] period from the [[Aptian]] through the [[Santonian]]. The frequency of magnetic reversals steadily decreased prior to the period, reaching its low point (no reversals) during the period. Between the Cretaceous Normal and the present, the frequency has generally increased slowly.<ref name=Merrill/>


The ''Kiaman Reverse Superchron'' lasted from approximately the late [[Carboniferous]] to the late [[Permian]], or for more than 50{{nbsp}}million years, from around {{mya|312|262}}.<ref name=Merrill/> The magnetic field had reversed polarity. The name "Kiaman" derives from the Australian town of [[Kiama, New South Wales|Kiama]], where some of the first geological evidence of the superchron was found in 1925.<ref>{{cite book|last=Courtillot|first=Vincent|author-link=Vincent Courtillot|title=Evolutionary Catastrophes: the Science of Mass Extinctions|location=Cambridge|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|date=1999|pages=[https://archive.org/details/evolutionarycata0000cour/page/n127 110]–111|isbn=978-0-521-58392-3|url=https://archive.org/details/evolutionarycata0000cour|url-access=registration}} Translated from the French by Joe McClinton.</ref>
The ''Kiaman Reverse Superchron'' lasted from approximately the late [[Carboniferous]] to the late [[Permian]], or for more than 50{{nbsp}}million years, from around {{mya|312|262}}.<ref name=Merrill/> The magnetic field had reversed polarity. The name "Kiaman" derives from the Australian town of [[Kiama, New South Wales|Kiama]], where some of the first geological evidence of the superchron was found in 1925.<ref name="courtillot1999"/>

The [[Ordovician]] is suspected to have hosted another superchron, called the ''Moyero Reverse Superchron'', lasting more than 20{{nbsp}}million years (485 to 463{{nbsp}}million years ago). Thus far, this possible superchron has only been found in the Moyero river section north of the polar circle in Siberia.<ref name=Pavlov>{{cite journal|last1=Pavlov|first1=V.|last2=Gallet|first2=Y.|title=A third superchron during the Early Paleozoic|journal=Episodes|year=2005|publisher=International Union of Geological Sciences|volume=28|issue=2|pages=78–84|doi=10.18814/epiiugs/2005/v28i2/001|doi-access=free}}</ref> Moreover, the best data from elsewhere in the world do not show evidence for this superchron.<ref name=McElhinny>{{cite book|last1= McElhinny|first1=Michael W.|last2=McFadden|first2=Phillip L.|title=Paleomagnetism: Continents and Oceans|publisher=[[Academic Press]]|date=2000|isbn=0-12-483355-1}}</ref>


The [[Ordovician]] is suspected to have hosted another superchron, called the ''Moyero Reverse Superchron'', lasting more than 20{{nbsp}}million years (485 to 463{{nbsp}}million years ago). Thus far, this possible superchron has only been found in the Moyero river section north of the polar circle in Siberia.<ref name=Pavlov/> Moreover, the best data from elsewhere in the world do not show evidence for this superchron.<ref name=McElhinny/>
Certain regions of ocean floor, older than {{mya|160|Ma}}, have low-amplitude magnetic anomalies that are hard to interpret. They are found off the east coast of North America, the northwest coast of Africa, and the western Pacific. They were once thought to represent a superchron called the ''Jurassic Quiet Zone'', but magnetic anomalies are found on land during this period. The geomagnetic field is known to have low intensity between about {{mya|130|Ma}} and {{mya|170|Ma}}, and these sections of ocean floor are especially deep, causing the geomagnetic signal to be attenuated between the seabed and the surface.<ref name=McElhinny/>
Certain regions of ocean floor, older than {{mya|160|Ma}}, have low-amplitude magnetic anomalies that are hard to interpret. They are found off the east coast of North America, the northwest coast of Africa, and the western Pacific. They were once thought to represent a superchron called the ''Jurassic Quiet Zone'', but magnetic anomalies are found on land during this period. The geomagnetic field is known to have low intensity between about {{mya|130|Ma}} and {{mya|170|Ma}}, and these sections of ocean floor are especially deep, causing the geomagnetic signal to be attenuated between the seabed and the surface.<ref name=McElhinny/>


===Statistical properties of reversals===
===Statistical properties===
Several studies have analyzed the statistical properties of reversals in the hope of learning something about their underlying mechanism. The discriminating power of statistical tests is limited by the small number of polarity intervals. Nevertheless, some general features are well established. In particular, the pattern of reversals is random. There is no correlation between the lengths of polarity intervals.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Phillips|first1=J. D.|last2=Cox|first2=A.|title=Spectral analysis of geomagnetic reversal time scales|journal=[[Geophysical Journal International|Geophysical Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society]]|volume=45|pages=19–33|date=1976|bibcode = 1976GeoJ...45...19P |doi = 10.1111/j.1365-246X.1976.tb00311.x |doi-access=free}}</ref> There is no preference for either normal or reversed polarity, and no statistical difference between the distributions of these polarities. This lack of bias is also a robust prediction of [[dynamo theory]].<ref name=Merrill/>
Several studies have analyzed the statistical properties of reversals in the hope of learning something about their underlying mechanism. The discriminating power of statistical tests is limited by the small number of polarity intervals. Nevertheless, some general features are well established. In particular, the pattern of reversals is random. There is no correlation between the lengths of polarity intervals.<ref name="phillips1976"/> There is no preference for either normal or reversed polarity, and no statistical difference between the distributions of these polarities. This lack of bias is also a robust prediction of [[dynamo theory]].<ref name=Merrill/>


There is no ''rate'' of reversals, as they are statistically random. The randomness of the reversals is inconsistent with periodicity, but several authors have claimed to find periodicity.<ref>e.g., {{cite journal|last=Raup|first=D. M. |year=1985 |title=Magnetic reversals and mass extinctions|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|volume= 314|issue=6009 |pages=341–343|doi=10.1038/314341a0|pmid=11541995 |bibcode = 1985Natur.314..341R |s2cid=28977097 }}</ref> However, these results are probably artifacts of an analysis using sliding windows to attempt to determine reversal rates.<ref name="Lutz">{{cite journal|last=Lutz|first=T. M.|title=The magnetic reversal record is not periodic|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|volume=317|issue=6036|pages=404–407|date=1985|doi=10.1038/317404a0|bibcode = 1985Natur.317..404L |s2cid=32756319}}</ref>
There is no ''rate'' of reversals, as they are statistically random. The randomness of the reversals is inconsistent with periodicity, but several authors have claimed to find periodicity.<ref name="raup1985"/> However, these results are probably artifacts of an analysis using sliding windows to attempt to determine reversal rates.<ref name="Lutz"/>


Most statistical models of reversals have analyzed them in terms of a [[Poisson process]] or other kinds of [[renewal process]]. A Poisson process would have, on average, a constant reversal rate, so it is common to use a non-stationary Poisson process. However, compared to a Poisson process, there is a reduced probability of reversal for tens of thousands of years after a reversal. This could be due to an inhibition in the underlying mechanism, or it could just mean that some shorter polarity intervals have been missed.<ref name=Merrill/> A random reversal pattern with inhibition can be represented by a [[gamma process]]. In 2006, a team of physicists at the [[University of Calabria]] found that the reversals also conform to a [[Lévy distribution]], which describes [[stochastic process]]es with long-ranging correlations between events in time.<ref>{{cite web|url= http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2006/mar/21/geomagnetic-flip-may-not-be-random-after-all |title=Geomagnetic flip may not be random after all|work=physicsworld.com|date=March 21, 2006|last=Dumé|first=Belle|access-date=December 27, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Carbone|first1= V.|last2=Sorriso-Valvo|first2=L.|last3=Vecchio|first3=A.|last4=Lepreti|first4=F.|last5=Veltri|first5=P.|last6=Harabaglia|first6=P.|last7=Guerra| first7 = I.|title=Clustering of Polarity Reversals of the Geomagnetic Field|journal=[[Physical Review Letters]]|volume=96|issue= 12|page=128501|doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.96.128501|bibcode=2006PhRvL..96l8501C|arxiv = physics/0603086|pmid=16605965|year= 2006|s2cid= 6521371}}</ref> The data are also consistent with a deterministic, but chaotic, process.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Gaffin|first=S.|title=Analysis of scaling in the geomagnetic polarity reversal record|journal=[[Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors]]|volume=57|issue=3–4|pages=284–289|date=1989|bibcode = 1989PEPI...57..284G |doi = 10.1016/0031-9201(89)90117-9 |doi-access=free}}</ref>
Most statistical models of reversals have analyzed them in terms of a [[Poisson process]] or other kinds of [[renewal process]]. A Poisson process would have, on average, a constant reversal rate, so it is common to use a non-stationary Poisson process. However, compared to a Poisson process, there is a reduced probability of reversal for tens of thousands of years after a reversal. This could be due to an inhibition in the underlying mechanism, or it could just mean that some shorter polarity intervals have been missed.<ref name=Merrill/> A random reversal pattern with inhibition can be represented by a [[gamma process]]. In 2006, a team of physicists at the [[University of Calabria]] found that the reversals also conform to a [[Lévy distribution]], which describes [[stochastic process]]es with long-ranging correlations between events in time.<ref name="physicsworld2006"/><ref name="carbone2006"/> The data are also consistent with a deterministic, but chaotic, process.<ref name="gaffin1989"/>


==Character of transitions==
==Character of transitions==


===Duration===
===Duration===
Most estimates for the duration of a polarity transition are between 1,000 and 10,000 years,<ref name="Merrill"/> but some estimates are as quick as a human lifetime.<ref name="quick"/> During a transition, the magnetic field will not vanish completely, but many poles might form chaotically in different places during reversal, until it stabilizes again.<ref name="NASA_inconstant"/><ref name="Glatzmaier"/>
Most estimates for the duration of a polarity transition are between 1,000 and 10,000 years,<ref name="Merrill"/> but some estimates are as quick as a human lifetime.<ref name="quick">{{cite journal|author=Leonardo Sagnotti|author2=Giancarlo Scardia|author3=Biagio Giaccio|author4=Joseph C. Liddicoat|author5=Sebastien Nomade|author6=Paul R. Renne|author7=Courtney J. Sprain|date=21 July 2014|title=Extremely rapid directional change during Matuyama-Brunhes geomagnetic polarity reversal|journal=Geophys. J. Int.|volume=199|issue=2|pages=1110–1124|bibcode=2014GeoJI.199.1110S|doi=10.1093/gji/ggu287|doi-access=free}}</ref> Studies of 16.7-million-year-old lava flows on [[Steens Mountain]], Oregon, indicate that the Earth's magnetic field is capable of shifting at a rate of up to 6 degrees per day.<ref name="nature.com">{{cite journal|title=New evidence for extraordinarily rapid change of the geomagnetic field during a reversal |journal=Nature|date=20 April 1995| doi= 10.1038/374687a0|last1=Coe|first1=R. S.|last2=Prévot|first2=M.|last3=Camps|first3=P.|volume=374|issue=6524|page=687|bibcode=1995Natur.374..687C|s2cid=4247637}}</ref> This was initially met with skepticism from paleomagnetists. Even if changes occur that quickly in the core, the mantle, which is a [[semiconductor]], is thought to remove variations with periods less than a few months. A variety of possible [[rock magnetism|rock magnetic]] mechanisms were proposed that would lead to a false signal.<ref name=Merrill2010>{{cite book|last=Merrill|first=Ronald T.|title=Our magnetic Earth : the science of geomagnetism|date=2010|publisher=The University of Chicago Press|location=Chicago|isbn=978-0-226-52050-6}}</ref> However, paleomagnetic studies of other sections from the same region (the Oregon Plateau flood basalts) give consistent results.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Prévot |first1=M. |first2=E. |last2=Mankinen |first3=R. |last3=Coe |first4=C. |last4=Grommé |date=1985 |title=The Steens Mountain (Oregon) Geomagnetic Polarity Transition 2. Field Intensity Variations and Discussion of Reversal Models |journal=[[J. Geophys. Res.]] |volume=90 |issue=B12 |pages=10417–10448|bibcode = 1985JGR....9010417P |doi = 10.1029/JB090iB12p10417 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Mankinen|first1=Edward A.|last2=Prévot |first2=Michel |last3=Grommé |first3=C. Sherman |last4=Coe |first4=Robert S.|title=The Steens Mountain (Oregon) Geomagnetic Polarity Transition 1. Directional History, Duration of Episodes, and Rock Magnetism|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|date=1 January 1985|volume=90|issue=B12|page=10393|doi=10.1029/JB090iB12p10393 |bibcode=1985JGR....9010393M}}</ref> It appears that the reversed-to-normal polarity transition that marks the end of Chron C5Cr ({{ma|16.7}}) contains a series of reversals and excursions.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Jarboe |first1=Nicholas A. |last2=Coe |first2=Robert S. |last3=Glen |first3=Jonathan M.G. |title=Evidence from lava flows for complex polarity transitions: the new composite Steens Mountain reversal record |journal=[[Geophysical Journal International]] |volume= 186 |issue=2 |pages=580–602 |date=2011 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-246X.2011.05086.x|bibcode = 2011GeoJI.186..580J |doi-access=free }}</ref> In addition, geologists Scott Bogue of Occidental College and Jonathan Glen of the US Geological Survey, sampling lava flows in [[Battle Mountain, Nevada]], found evidence for a brief, several-year-long interval during a reversal when the field direction changed by over 50 degrees. The reversal was dated to approximately 15{{nbsp}}million years ago.<ref>{{cite magazine|last1=Witze|first1=Alexandra|title=Earth's Magnetic Field Flipped Superfast|url=https://www.wired.com/2010/09/superfast-magnetic-reversal/|magazine=Wired|date=September 2, 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Bogue|first=S.W.|title=Very rapid geomagnetic field change recorded by the partial remagnetization of a lava flow|journal= Geophys. Res. Lett.|volume= 37|issue=21|page= L21308| doi=10.1029/2010GL044286|date=10 November 2010 |bibcode = 2010GeoRL..3721308B |s2cid=129896450 }}</ref> In August 2018, researchers reported a reversal lasting only 200 years.<ref name="ES-20180821">{{cite web |last=Byrd |first=Deborah |title=Researchers find fast flip in Earth's magnetic field |url=http://earthsky.org/earth/study-magnetic-field-reversals-happen-faster-than-thought |date=21 August 2018 |work=[[EarthSky]] |access-date=22 August 2018 }}</ref> But a 2019 paper estimated that the most recent reversal, 780,000 years ago, lasted 22,000 years.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Singer|first1=Brad S.|last2=Jicha|first2=Brian R.|last3=Mochizuki|first3=Nobutatsu|last4=Coe|first4=Robert S.|date=August 7, 2019|title=Synchronizing volcanic, sedimentary, and ice core records of Earth's last magnetic polarity reversal|journal=Science Advances|language=en|volume=5|issue=8|pages=eaaw4621|doi=10.1126/sciadv.aaw4621|pmid=31457087|pmc=6685714|bibcode=2019SciA....5.4621S|issn=2375-2548|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.space.com/lava-flows-earth-magnetic-field-reversal.html|title=Earth's Last Magnetic-Pole Flip Took Much Longer Than We Thought|last1=Science|first1=Passant|last2=Rabie|date=2019-08-07|website=Space.com|language=en|access-date=2019-08-08|df=mdy-all}}</ref>


Studies of 16.7-million-year-old lava flows on [[Steens Mountain]], Oregon, indicate that the Earth's magnetic field is capable of shifting at a rate of up to 6 degrees per day.<ref name="nature.com"/> This was initially met with skepticism from paleomagnetists. Even if changes occur that quickly in the core, the mantle—which is a [[semiconductor]]—is thought to remove variations with periods less than a few months. A variety of possible [[rock magnetism|rock magnetic]] mechanisms were proposed that would lead to a false signal.<ref name="Merrill2010"/> That said, paleomagnetic studies of other sections from the same region (the Oregon Plateau [[Flood basalt|flood basalts]]) give consistent results.<ref name="prevot1985"/><ref name="mankinen1985"/> It appears that the reversed-to-normal polarity transition that marks the end of Chron C5Cr ({{ma|16.7}}) contains a series of reversals and excursions.<ref name="jarboe2011"/> In addition, geologists Scott Bogue of Occidental College and Jonathan Glen of the US Geological Survey, sampling lava flows in [[Battle Mountain, Nevada]], found evidence for a brief, several-year-long interval during a reversal when the field direction changed by over 50 degrees. The reversal was dated to approximately 15{{nbsp}}million years ago.<ref name="wired2010"/><ref name="bogue2010"/> In 2018, researchers reported a reversal lasting only 200 years.<ref name="ES-20180821"/> A 2019 paper estimates that the most recent reversal, 780,000 years ago, lasted 22,000 years.<ref name="singer2019"/><ref name="spacelavaflows"/>
===Magnetic field===
The magnetic field will not vanish completely, but many poles might form chaotically in different places during reversal, until it stabilizes again.<ref name="NASA_inconstant">{{cite web |url=https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2003/29dec_magneticfield/|title=Earth's Inconstant Magnetic Field |access-date=25 Oct 2014}}</ref><ref name=Glatzmaier>{{cite web|url=http://es.ucsc.edu/~glatz/geodynamo.html|title=The Geodynamo|last1=Glatzmaier|first1=Gary}}</ref>


==Causes==
==Causes==
[[File:NASA 54559main comparison1 strip.gif|thumb|350px|NASA computer simulation using the model of Glatzmaier and Roberts.<ref name=selfconsistent/> The tubes represent [[Magnetic field#Magnetic field lines|magnetic field lines]], blue when the field points towards the center and yellow when away. The rotation axis of the Earth is centered and vertical. The dense clusters of lines are within the Earth's core.<ref name=Glatzmaier/>]]
[[File:NASA 54559main comparison1 strip.gif|thumb|350px|NASA computer simulation using the model of Glatzmaier and Roberts.<ref name=selfconsistent/> The tubes represent [[Magnetic field#Magnetic field lines|magnetic field lines]], blue when the field points towards the center and yellow when away. The rotation axis of the Earth is centered and vertical. The dense clusters of lines are within the Earth's core.<ref name=Glatzmaier/>]]
The magnetic field of the Earth, and of other planets that have magnetic fields, is generated by [[dynamo theory|dynamo action]] in which [[convection]] of molten iron in the planetary core generates electric currents which in turn give rise to magnetic fields.<ref name=Merrill/> In [[Computational physics|simulations]] of planetary dynamos, reversals often emerge spontaneously from the underlying dynamics. For example, Gary Glatzmaier and collaborator Paul Roberts of [[UCLA]] ran a numerical model of the coupling between electromagnetism and fluid dynamics in the Earth's interior. Their simulation reproduced key features of the magnetic field over more than 40,000 years of simulated time and the computer-generated field reversed itself.<ref name=selfconsistent>{{cite news|last1=Glatzmaier|first1=Gary A.|last2=Roberts|first2=Paul H.|title=A three dimensional self-consistent computer simulation of a geomagnetic field reversal|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|volume=377|pages=203–209}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.psc.edu/science/glatzmaier.html|title=When North goes South|last1=Glatzmaier|first1=Gary|last2=Roberts|first2=Paul|access-date=2006-04-09|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070207054537/http://www.psc.edu/science/glatzmaier.html|archive-date=2007-02-07|url-status=dead}}</ref> Global field reversals at irregular intervals have also been observed in the laboratory [[liquid metal]] experiment "VKS2".<ref name=VKSreversals>{{cite news|last1=Berhanu|first1=M.|last2=Monchaux|first2=R.|last3=Fauve|first3=S.|last4=Mordant|first4=N.|last5=Petrelis|first5=F.|last6=Chiffaudel|first6=A.|last7=Daviaud|first7=F.|last8=Dubrulle|first8=B.|author8-link= Bérengère Dubrulle |last9=Marie|first9=L.|last10=Ravelet|first10=F.|last11=Bourgoin|first11=M.|last12=Odier|first12=P.|last13=Pinton|first13=J.-F.|last14=Volk|first14=R.|title=Magnetic field reversals in an experimental turbulent dynamo|journal=[[Europhysics Letters|EPL]]|volume=77|page=59001}}</ref>
The magnetic field of the Earth, and of other planets that have magnetic fields, is generated by [[dynamo theory|dynamo action]] in which [[convection]] of molten iron in the planetary core generates electric currents which in turn give rise to magnetic fields.<ref name=Merrill/> In [[Computational physics|simulations]] of planetary dynamos, reversals often emerge spontaneously from the underlying dynamics. For example, Gary Glatzmaier and collaborator Paul Roberts of [[UCLA]] ran a numerical model of the coupling between electromagnetism and fluid dynamics in the Earth's interior. Their simulation reproduced key features of the magnetic field over more than 40,000 years of simulated time, and the computer-generated field reversed itself.<ref name=selfconsistent/><ref name="pscreversals"/> Global field reversals at irregular intervals have also been observed in the laboratory [[liquid metal]] experiment "VKS2".<ref name=VKSreversals/>


In some simulations, this leads to an instability in which the magnetic field spontaneously flips over into the opposite orientation. This scenario is supported by observations of the [[solar magnetic field]], which undergoes spontaneous [[Solar cycle|reversals]] every 9–12 years. However, with the Sun it is observed that the solar magnetic intensity greatly increases during a reversal, whereas reversals on Earth seem to occur during periods of low field strength.<ref name=Coe>{{cite journal|doi= 10.1098/rsta.2000.0578|last1=Coe|first1=Robert S.|last2=Hongré|first2=Lionel|last3=Glatzmaier|first3=Gary A.|title=An Examination of Simulated Geomagnetic Reversals from a Palaeomagnetic Perspective|journal=[[Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences]]|volume=358|issue=1768|pages=1141–1170|date=2000|bibcode=2000RSPTA.358.1141C|s2cid=16224793}}</ref>
In some simulations, this leads to an instability in which the magnetic field spontaneously flips over into the opposite orientation. This scenario is supported by observations of the [[solar magnetic field]], which undergoes spontaneous [[Solar cycle|reversals]] every 9–12 years. With the Sun it is observed that the solar magnetic intensity greatly increases during a reversal, whereas reversals on Earth seem to occur during periods of low field strength.<ref name=Coe/>


Some scientists, such as [[Richard A. Muller]], think that geomagnetic reversals are not spontaneous processes but rather are triggered by external events that directly disrupt the flow in the Earth's core. Proposals include [[impact events]]<ref name= muller86/><ref name=muller2002/> or internal events such as the arrival of continental slabs carried down into the [[Mantle (geology)|mantle]] by the action of [[plate tectonics]] at [[Subduction|subduction zones]] or the initiation of new [[mantle plume]]s from the [[core-mantle boundary]].<ref name=McFadden/> Supporters of this hypothesis hold that any of these events could lead to a large scale disruption of the dynamo, effectively turning off the geomagnetic field. Because the magnetic field is stable in either the present north–south orientation or a reversed orientation, they propose that when the field recovers from such a disruption it spontaneously chooses one state or the other, such that half the recoveries become reversals. This proposed mechanism does not appear to work in a quantitative model, and the evidence from [[stratigraphy]] for a correlation between reversals and impact events is weak. There is no evidence for a reversal connected with the impact event that caused the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event]].<ref name="merrill1990"/>
The most scientifically accepted theory to justify geomagnetism was presented on November 15, 1919, by Joseph Larmor – that of the geodynamo, which would also justify solar magnetism. But this theory, under no circumstances, justifies all the geomagnetic behaviors already experimentally verified: the generation of magnetism – the ability to generate ordered magnetic fields; magnetic decay between rotation axes and magnetic alignment; erratic decline – the lag angle between the axes is erratic; not antipodes – the poles are not diametrically opposite; reversals - hundreds of magnetic pole reversals have occurred over millions of years; excursion - the magnetic axis has been temporarily aligned with the equator. In any case, the origins of geomagnetism, to this day, are not sufficiently well explained. Of the various theories that have been presented for more than a century, none of them addresses all the geomagnetic phenomena and behaviors observed over time. The present work will present a new hypothesis to fully justify the generation, maintenance and behavior of geomagnetism, and which will certainly serve to justify, in the same way, the magnetic field existing in other celestial bodies.

===Hypothesized triggers===
Some scientists, such as [[Richard A. Muller]], think that geomagnetic reversals are not spontaneous processes but rather are triggered by external events that directly disrupt the flow in the Earth's core. Proposals include [[impact events]]<ref name= muller86>{{cite journal|last1=Muller|first1=Richard A.|last2=Morris|first2=Donald E.|title=Geomagnetic reversals from impacts on the Earth|journal=[[Geophysical Research Letters]]|volume=13|issue=11|pages=1177–1180|date=1986|doi=10.1029/GL013i011p01177|bibcode=1986GeoRL..13.1177M|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1231384}}</ref><ref name=muller2002>{{cite journal|title=Avalanches at the core-mantle boundary|journal=[[Geophysical Research Letters]]|date=2002|first=RA.|page=1935|last=Muller|volume=29|issue=19|doi=10.1029/2002GL015938|bibcode=2002GeoRL..29.1935M|citeseerx=10.1.1.508.8308|doi-access=free}}</ref> or internal events such as the arrival of continental slabs carried down into the [[Mantle (geology)|mantle]] by the action of [[plate tectonics]] at [[Subduction|subduction zones]] or the initiation of new [[mantle plume]]s from the [[core-mantle boundary]].<ref name=McFadden>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/0031-9201(86)90118-4|last1=McFadden|first1=P. L.|last2=Merrill|first2=R. T.|title=Geodynamo energy source constraints from paleomagnetic data|journal=[[Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors]]|volume=43|issue=1|pages=22–33|date=1986|bibcode = 1986PEPI...43...22M }}</ref> Supporters of this hypothesis hold that any of these events could lead to a large scale disruption of the dynamo, effectively turning off the geomagnetic field. Because the magnetic field is stable in either the present north–south orientation or a reversed orientation, they propose that when the field recovers from such a disruption it spontaneously chooses one state or the other, such that half the recoveries become reversals. However, the proposed mechanism does not appear to work in a quantitative model, and the evidence from [[stratigraphy]] for a correlation between reversals and impact events is weak. There is no evidence for a reversal connected with the impact event that caused the [[Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Merrill|first=R. T.|author2=McFadden, P. L.|title=Paleomagnetism and the Nature of the Geodynamo|journal=Science|date=20 April 1990|volume=248|issue=4953|pages=345–350|doi=10.1126/science.248.4953.345|bibcode = 1990Sci...248..345M|pmid=17784488|s2cid=11945905}}</ref>


==Effects on biosphere==
==Effects on biosphere==
Shortly after the first geomagnetic polarity time scales were produced, scientists began exploring the possibility that reversals could be linked to [[Extinction event|extinction events]].<ref name="raup1985"/> Many such arguments were based on an apparent periodicity in the rate of reversals, but more careful analyses show that the reversal record is not periodic.<ref name="Lutz" /> It may be that the ends of superchrons have caused vigorous convection leading to widespread volcanism, and that the subsequent airborne ash caused extinctions.<ref name="mantleplumes"/> Tests of correlations between extinctions and reversals are difficult for several reasons. Larger animals are too scarce in the fossil record for good statistics, so paleontologists have analyzed microfossil extinctions. Even microfossil data can be unreliable if there are hiatuses in the fossil record. It can appear that the extinction occurs at the end of a polarity interval when the rest of that polarity interval was simply eroded away.<ref name="Merrill2010" /> Statistical analysis shows no evidence for a correlation between reversals and extinctions.<ref name="plotnick1980"/><ref name="Glassmeier2010" />
Shortly after the first geomagnetic polarity time scales were produced, scientists began exploring the possibility that reversals could be linked to [[extinction]]s. Most such proposals rest on the assumption that the Earth's magnetic field would be much weaker during reversals. Possibly the first such hypothesis was that high-energy particles trapped in the [[Van Allen radiation belt]] could be liberated and bombard the Earth.<ref name=Glassmeier2010>{{cite journal|last=Glassmeier|first=Karl-Heinz|author2=Vogt, Joachim|title=Magnetic Polarity Transitions and Biospheric Effects|journal=Space Science Reviews|date=29 May 2010|volume=155|issue=1–4|pages=387–410|doi=10.1007/s11214-010-9659-6|bibcode = 2010SSRv..155..387G |s2cid=121837096}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Uffen|first=Robert J.|title=Influence of the Earth's Core on the Origin and Evolution of Life|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|date=13 April 1963|volume=198|issue=4876|pages=143–144|doi=10.1038/198143b0|bibcode = 1963Natur.198..143U |s2cid=4192617}}</ref> Detailed calculations confirm that if the Earth's dipole field disappeared entirely (leaving the quadrupole and higher components), most of the atmosphere would become accessible to high-energy particles, but would act as a barrier to them, and cosmic ray collisions would produce secondary radiation of [[beryllium-10]] or [[chlorine-36]]. A 2012 German study of Greenland ice cores showed a peak of beryllium-10 during a brief complete reversal 41,000 years ago, which led to the magnetic field strength dropping to an estimated 5% of normal during the reversal.<ref name="sciencedaily.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/10/121016084936.htm|title=Ice age polarity reversal was global event: Extremely brief reversal of geomagnetic field, climate variability, and super volcano|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.-->|date=2012-10-16|website=Sciencedaily.com|publisher=[[Science Daily]]|access-date=2013-07-28}}</ref> There is evidence that this occurs both during [[Geomagnetic secular variation|secular variation]]<ref>{{cite journal|last=McHargue|first=L.R|author2=Donahue, D |author3=Damon, P.E |author4=Sonett, C.P |author5=Biddulph, D |author6=Burr, G |title=Geomagnetic modulation of the late Pleistocene cosmic-ray flux as determined by 10Be from Blake Outer Ridge marine sediments|journal=Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms|date=1 October 2000|volume=172|issue=1–4|pages=555–561|doi=10.1016/S0168-583X(00)00092-6|bibcode = 2000NIMPB.172..555M |url=https://zenodo.org/record/1259911}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Baumgartner|first=S.|title=Geomagnetic Modulation of the 36Cl Flux in the GRIP Ice Core, Greenland|journal=Science|date=27 February 1998|volume=279|issue=5355|pages=1330–1332|doi=10.1126/science.279.5355.1330|pmid=9478888|bibcode = 1998Sci...279.1330B }}</ref> and during reversals.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Raisbeck|first=G. M.|author2=Yiou, F. |author3=Bourles, D. |author4=Kent, D. V. |title=Evidence for an increase in cosmogenic 10Be during a geomagnetic reversal|journal=Nature|date=23 May 1985|volume=315|issue=6017|pages=315–317|doi=10.1038/315315a0|bibcode = 1985Natur.315..315R |s2cid=4324833|url=https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8DR34ZP/download}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Raisbeck|first=G. M.|author2=Yiou, F. |author3=Cattani, O. |author4=Jouzel, J. |title=10Be evidence for the Matuyama–Brunhes geomagnetic reversal in the EPICA Dome C ice core|journal=Nature|date=2 November 2006|volume=444|issue=7115|pages=82–84|doi=10.1038/nature05266|bibcode = 2006Natur.444...82R |pmid=17080088|s2cid=4425406}}</ref>


Most proposals tying reversals to extinction events assume that the Earth's magnetic field would be much weaker during reversals. Possibly the first such hypothesis was that high-energy particles trapped in the [[Van Allen radiation belt]] could be liberated and bombard the Earth.<ref name="Glassmeier2010"/><ref name="uffen1963"/> Detailed calculations confirm that if the Earth's dipole field disappeared entirely (leaving the quadrupole and higher components), most of the atmosphere would become accessible to high-energy particles but would act as a barrier to them, and cosmic ray collisions would produce secondary radiation of [[beryllium-10]] or [[chlorine-36]]. A 2012 German study of Greenland [[Ice core|ice cores]] showed a peak of beryllium-10 during a brief complete [[Laschamp event|reversal 41,000 years ago]], which led to the magnetic field strength dropping to an estimated 5% of normal during the reversal.<ref name="sciencedaily.com"/> There is evidence that this occurs both during [[Geomagnetic secular variation|secular variation]]<ref name="mchargue2000"/><ref name="baumgartner1998"/> and during reversals.<ref name="raisbeck1985"/><ref name="raisbeck2006"/>
Another hypothesis by McCormac and Evans assumes that the Earth's field disappears entirely during reversals.<ref>{{cite journal|last=McCormac|first=Billy M.|author2=Evans, John E.|title=Consequences of Very Small Planetary Magnetic Moments|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|date=20 September 1969|volume=223|issue=5212|pages=1255|doi=10.1038/2231255a0|bibcode = 1969Natur.223.1255M |s2cid=4295498|doi-access=free}}</ref> They argue that the atmosphere of Mars may have been eroded away by the [[solar wind]] because it had no magnetic field to protect it. They predict that ions would be stripped away from Earth's atmosphere above 100&nbsp;km. However, [[paleointensity]] measurements show that the magnetic field has not disappeared during reversals. Based on paleointensity data for the last 800,000 years,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Guyodo |first1=Yohan |last2=Valet |first2=Jean-Pierre |title=Global changes in intensity of the Earth's magnetic field during the past 800 kyr |journal=Nature |date=20 May 1999 |volume=399 |issue=6733 |pages=249–252 |doi=10.1038/20420 |bibcode = 1999Natur.399..249G |hdl=1874/1501 |s2cid=4426319 |url=https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00239/35064/34592.pdf |hdl-access=free }}</ref> the [[magnetopause]] is still estimated to have been at about three Earth radii during the [[Brunhes-Matuyama reversal]].<ref name=Glassmeier2010/> Even if the internal magnetic field did disappear, the [[solar wind]] can induce a magnetic field in the Earth's [[ionosphere]] sufficient to shield the surface from energetic particles.<ref>{{cite journal|first1=G. T.|last1= Birk|first2=H.|last2=Lesch|first3=C.|last3=Konz|title=Solar wind induced magnetic field around the unmagnetized Earth|doi=10.1051/0004-6361:20040154|journal=[[Astronomy & Astrophysics]]|date=2004|volume=420|issue=2|pages=L15–L18|bibcode=2004A&A...420L..15B|arxiv = astro-ph/0404580 |s2cid= 15352610}}</ref>


A hypothesis by McCormac and Evans assumes that the Earth's field disappears entirely during reversals.<ref name="mccormac1969"/> They argue that the [[atmosphere of Mars]] may have been eroded away by the [[solar wind]] because it had no magnetic field to protect it. They predict that ions would be stripped away from Earth's atmosphere above 100&nbsp;km. [[Paleointensity]] measurements show that the magnetic field has not disappeared during reversals. Based on paleointensity data for the last 800,000 years,<ref name="guyodo1999"/> the [[magnetopause]] is still estimated to have been at about three Earth radii during the Brunhes–Matuyama reversal.<ref name="Glassmeier2010" /> Even if the internal magnetic field did disappear, the solar wind can induce a magnetic field in the Earth's [[ionosphere]] sufficient to shield the surface from energetic particles.<ref name="birk2004"/>
Hypotheses have also advanced toward linking reversals to [[mass extinctions]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Raup|first=David M.|title=Magnetic reversals and mass extinctions|journal=Nature|date=28 March 1985|volume=314|issue=6009|pages=341–343|doi=10.1038/314341a0|pmid=11541995|bibcode = 1985Natur.314..341R |s2cid=28977097}}</ref> Many such arguments were based on an apparent periodicity in the rate of reversals, but more careful analyses show that the reversal record is not periodic.<ref name="Lutz" />
It may be, however, that the ends of superchrons have caused vigorous convection leading to widespread volcanism, and that the subsequent airborne ash caused extinctions.<ref name="mantleplumes">{{cite journal|last1=Courtillot|first1=V.|last2=Olson|first2=P.|title=Mantle plumes link magnetic superchrons to phanerozoic mass depletion events|journal=[[Earth and Planetary Science Letters]]|date=2007|volume=260|issue=3–4 |pages=495–504|doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2007.06.003|bibcode=2007E&PSL.260..495C}}</ref>

Tests of correlations between extinctions and reversals are difficult for a number of reasons. Larger animals are too scarce in the fossil record for good statistics, so paleontologists have analyzed microfossil extinctions. Even microfossil data can be unreliable if there are hiatuses in the fossil record. It can appear that the extinction occurs at the end of a polarity interval when the rest of that polarity interval was simply eroded away.<ref name=Merrill2010/> Statistical analysis shows no evidence for a correlation between reversals and extinctions.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Plotnick|first=Roy E.|title=Relationship between biological extinctions and geomagnetic reversals|journal=Geology|date=1 January 1980|volume=8|issue=12|page=578|doi=10.1130/0091-7613(1980)8<578:RBBEAG>2.0.CO;2|bibcode = 1980Geo.....8..578P }}</ref><ref name=Glassmeier2010/>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 94: Line 82:


==References==
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<ref name="mantleplumes">{{cite journal|last1=Courtillot|first1=V.|last2=Olson|first2=P.|title=Mantle plumes link magnetic superchrons to phanerozoic mass depletion events|journal=[[Earth and Planetary Science Letters]]|date=2007|volume=260|issue=3–4 |pages=495–504|doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2007.06.003|bibcode=2007E&PSL.260..495C}}</ref>

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<ref name="uffen1963">{{cite journal|last=Uffen|first=Robert J.|title=Influence of the Earth's Core on the Origin and Evolution of Life|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|date=13 April 1963|volume=198|issue=4876|pages=143–144|doi=10.1038/198143b0|bibcode = 1963Natur.198..143U |s2cid=4192617}}</ref>

<ref name="Glassmeier2010">{{cite journal|last=Glassmeier|first=Karl-Heinz|author2=Vogt, Joachim|title=Magnetic Polarity Transitions and Biospheric Effects|journal=Space Science Reviews|date=29 May 2010|volume=155|issue=1–4|pages=387–410|doi=10.1007/s11214-010-9659-6|bibcode = 2010SSRv..155..387G |s2cid=121837096}}</ref>

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<ref name="baumgartner1998">{{cite journal|last=Baumgartner|first=S.|title=Geomagnetic Modulation of the 36Cl Flux in the GRIP Ice Core, Greenland|journal=Science|date=27 February 1998|volume=279|issue=5355|pages=1330–1332|doi=10.1126/science.279.5355.1330|pmid=9478888|bibcode = 1998Sci...279.1330B }}</ref>

<ref name="mccormac1969">{{cite journal|last=McCormac|first=Billy M.|author2=Evans, John E.|title=Consequences of Very Small Planetary Magnetic Moments|journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]|date=20 September 1969|volume=223|issue=5212|pages=1255|doi=10.1038/2231255a0|bibcode = 1969Natur.223.1255M |s2cid=4295498|doi-access=free}}</ref>

<ref name=selfconsistent>{{cite journal|last1=Glatzmaier|first1=Gary A. |last2=Roberts|first2=Paul H. |title=A three dimensional self-consistent computer simulation of a geomagnetic field reversal |journal=[[Nature (journal)|Nature]] |date=1995 |volume=377 |issue=6546 |pages=203–209 |bibcode=1995Natur.377..203G |doi=10.1038/377203a0}}</ref>

<ref name="birk2004">{{cite journal|first1=G. T.|last1= Birk|first2=H.|last2=Lesch|first3=C.|last3=Konz|title=Solar wind induced magnetic field around the unmagnetized Earth|doi=10.1051/0004-6361:20040154|journal=[[Astronomy & Astrophysics]]|date=2004|volume=420|issue=2|pages=L15–L18|bibcode=2004A&A...420L..15B|arxiv = astro-ph/0404580 |s2cid= 15352610}}</ref>

<ref name="guyodo1999">{{cite journal |last1=Guyodo |first1=Yohan |last2=Valet |first2=Jean-Pierre |title=Global changes in intensity of the Earth's magnetic field during the past 800 kyr |journal=Nature |date=20 May 1999 |volume=399 |issue=6733 |pages=249–252 |doi=10.1038/20420 |bibcode = 1999Natur.399..249G |hdl=1874/1501 |s2cid=4426319 |url=https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00239/35064/34592.pdf |hdl-access=free }}</ref>

<ref name="raisbeck2006">{{cite journal|last=Raisbeck|first=G. M.|author2=Yiou, F. |author3=Cattani, O. |author4=Jouzel, J. |title=10Be evidence for the Matuyama–Brunhes geomagnetic reversal in the EPICA Dome C ice core|journal=Nature|date=2 November 2006|volume=444|issue=7115|pages=82–84|doi=10.1038/nature05266|bibcode = 2006Natur.444...82R |pmid=17080088|s2cid=4425406}}</ref>

<ref name="raisbeck1985">{{cite journal|last=Raisbeck|first=G. M.|author2=Yiou, F. |author3=Bourles, D. |author4=Kent, D. V. |title=Evidence for an increase in cosmogenic 10Be during a geomagnetic reversal|journal=Nature|date=23 May 1985|volume=315|issue=6017|pages=315–317|doi=10.1038/315315a0|bibcode = 1985Natur.315..315R |s2cid=4324833|url=https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8DR34ZP/download}}</ref>

}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==

Latest revision as of 12:52, 27 August 2024

Geomagnetic polarity during the last 5 million years (Pliocene and Quaternary, late Cenozoic Era). Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's normal polarity; light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed.

A geomagnetic reversal is a change in a planet's dipole magnetic field such that the positions of magnetic north and magnetic south are interchanged (not to be confused with geographic north and geographic south). The Earth's magnetic field has alternated between periods of normal polarity, in which the predominant direction of the field was the same as the present direction, and reverse polarity, in which it was the opposite. These periods are called chrons.

Reversal occurrences are statistically random. There have been at least 183 reversals over the last 83 million years (on average once every ~450,000 years). The latest, the Brunhes–Matuyama reversal, occurred 780,000 years ago[1] with widely varying estimates of how quickly it happened. Other sources estimate that the time that it takes for a reversal to complete is on average around 7,000 years for the four most recent reversals.[2] Clement (2004) suggests that this duration is dependent on latitude, with shorter durations at low latitudes and longer durations at mid and high latitudes.[2] The duration of a full reversal varies between 2,000 and 12,000 years.[3]

Although there have been periods in which the field reversed globally (such as the Laschamp excursion) for several hundred years,[4] these events are classified as excursions rather than full geomagnetic reversals. Stable polarity chrons often show large, rapid directional excursions, which occur more often than reversals, and could be seen as failed reversals. During such an excursion, the field reverses in the liquid outer core but not in the solid inner core. Diffusion in the outer core is on timescales of 500 years or less while that of the inner core is longer, around 3,000 years.[5]

History

[edit]

In the early 20th century, geologists such as Bernard Brunhes first noticed that some volcanic rocks were magnetized opposite to the direction of the local Earth's field. The first systematic evidence for and time-scale estimate of the magnetic reversals were made by Motonori Matuyama in the late 1920s; he observed that rocks with reversed fields were all of early Pleistocene age or older. At the time, the Earth's polarity was poorly understood, and the possibility of reversal aroused little interest.[6][7]

Three decades later, when Earth's magnetic field was better understood, theories were advanced suggesting that the Earth's field might have reversed in the remote past. Most paleomagnetic research in the late 1950s included an examination of the wandering of the poles and continental drift. Although it was discovered that some rocks would reverse their magnetic field while cooling, it became apparent that most magnetized volcanic rocks preserved traces of the Earth's magnetic field at the time the rocks had cooled. In the absence of reliable methods for obtaining absolute ages for rocks, it was thought that reversals occurred approximately every million years.[6][7]

The next major advance in understanding reversals came when techniques for radiometric dating were improved in the 1950s. Allan Cox and Richard Doell, at the United States Geological Survey, wanted to know whether reversals occurred at regular intervals, and they invited geochronologist Brent Dalrymple to join their group. They produced the first magnetic-polarity time scale in 1959. As they accumulated data, they continued to refine this scale in competition with Don Tarling and Ian McDougall at the Australian National University. A group led by Neil Opdyke at the Lamont–Doherty Earth Observatory showed that the same pattern of reversals was recorded in sediments from deep-sea cores.[7]

During the 1950s and 1960s information about variations in the Earth's magnetic field was gathered largely by means of research vessels, but the complex routes of ocean cruises rendered the association of navigational data with magnetometer readings difficult. Only when data were plotted on a map did it become apparent that remarkably regular and continuous magnetic stripes appeared on the ocean floors.[6][7]

In 1963, Frederick Vine and Drummond Matthews provided a simple explanation by combining the seafloor spreading theory of Harry Hess with the known time scale of reversals: sea floor rock is magnetized in the direction of the field when it is formed. Thus, sea floor spreading from a central ridge will produce pairs of magnetic stripes parallel to the ridge.[8] Canadian L. W. Morley independently proposed a similar explanation in January 1963, but his work was rejected by the scientific journals Nature and Journal of Geophysical Research, and remained unpublished until 1967, when it appeared in the literary magazine Saturday Review.[6] The Morley–Vine–Matthews hypothesis was the first key scientific test of the seafloor spreading theory of continental drift.[7]

Past field reversals are recorded in the solidified ferrimagnetic minerals of consolidated sedimentary deposits or cooled volcanic flows on land. Beginning in 1966, Lamont–Doherty Geological Observatory scientists found that the magnetic profiles across the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge were symmetrical and matched the pattern in the north Atlantic's Reykjanes ridge. The same magnetic anomalies were found over most of the world's oceans, which permitted estimates for when most of the oceanic crust had developed.[6][7]

Observing past fields

[edit]
Geomagnetic polarity since the middle Jurassic. Dark areas denote periods where the polarity matches today's polarity, while light areas denote periods where that polarity is reversed. The Cretaceous Normal superchron is visible as the broad, uninterrupted black band near the middle of the image.

Because no existing unsubducted sea floor (or sea floor thrust onto continental plates) is more than about 180 million years (Ma) old, other methods are necessary for detecting older reversals. Most sedimentary rocks incorporate minute amounts of iron-rich minerals, whose orientation is influenced by the ambient magnetic field at the time at which they formed. These rocks can preserve a record of the field if it is not later erased by chemical, physical or biological change.

Because Earth's magnetic field is a global phenomenon, similar patterns of magnetic variations at different sites may be used to help calculate age in different locations. The past four decades of paleomagnetic data about seafloor ages (up to ~250 Ma) has been useful in estimating the age of geologic sections elsewhere. While not an independent dating method, it depends on "absolute" age dating methods like radioisotopic systems to derive numeric ages. It has become especially useful when studying metamorphic and igneous rock formations where index fossils are seldom available.

Geomagnetic polarity time scale

[edit]

Through analysis of seafloor magnetic anomalies and dating of reversal sequences on land, paleomagnetists have been developing a Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale. The current time scale contains 184 polarity intervals in the last 83 million years (and therefore 183 reversals).[9][10]

Changing frequency over time

[edit]

The rate of reversals in the Earth's magnetic field has varied widely over time. Around 72 Ma, the field reversed 5 times in a million years. In a 4-million-year period centered on 54 Ma, there were 10 reversals; at around 42 Ma, 17 reversals took place in the span of 3 million years. In a period of 3 million years centering on 24 Ma, 13 reversals occurred. No fewer than 51 reversals occurred in a 12-million-year period, centering on 15 Ma. Two reversals occurred during a span of 50,000 years. These eras of frequent reversals have been counterbalanced by a few "superchrons": long periods when no reversals took place.[11]

Superchrons

[edit]

A superchron is a polarity interval lasting at least 10 million years. There are two well-established superchrons, the Cretaceous Normal and the Kiaman. A third candidate, the Moyero, is more controversial. The Jurassic Quiet Zone in ocean magnetic anomalies was once thought to represent a superchron but is now attributed to other causes.

The Cretaceous Normal (also called the Cretaceous Superchron or C34) lasted for almost 40 million years, from about 120 to 83 million years ago, including stages of the Cretaceous period from the Aptian through the Santonian. The frequency of magnetic reversals steadily decreased prior to the period, reaching its low point (no reversals) during the period. Between the Cretaceous Normal and the present, the frequency has generally increased slowly.[12]

The Kiaman Reverse Superchron lasted from approximately the late Carboniferous to the late Permian, or for more than 50 million years, from around 312 to 262 million years ago.[12] The magnetic field had reversed polarity. The name "Kiaman" derives from the Australian town of Kiama, where some of the first geological evidence of the superchron was found in 1925.[13]

The Ordovician is suspected to have hosted another superchron, called the Moyero Reverse Superchron, lasting more than 20 million years (485 to 463 million years ago). Thus far, this possible superchron has only been found in the Moyero river section north of the polar circle in Siberia.[14] Moreover, the best data from elsewhere in the world do not show evidence for this superchron.[15] Certain regions of ocean floor, older than 160 Ma, have low-amplitude magnetic anomalies that are hard to interpret. They are found off the east coast of North America, the northwest coast of Africa, and the western Pacific. They were once thought to represent a superchron called the Jurassic Quiet Zone, but magnetic anomalies are found on land during this period. The geomagnetic field is known to have low intensity between about 130 Ma and 170 Ma, and these sections of ocean floor are especially deep, causing the geomagnetic signal to be attenuated between the seabed and the surface.[15]

Statistical properties

[edit]

Several studies have analyzed the statistical properties of reversals in the hope of learning something about their underlying mechanism. The discriminating power of statistical tests is limited by the small number of polarity intervals. Nevertheless, some general features are well established. In particular, the pattern of reversals is random. There is no correlation between the lengths of polarity intervals.[16] There is no preference for either normal or reversed polarity, and no statistical difference between the distributions of these polarities. This lack of bias is also a robust prediction of dynamo theory.[12]

There is no rate of reversals, as they are statistically random. The randomness of the reversals is inconsistent with periodicity, but several authors have claimed to find periodicity.[17] However, these results are probably artifacts of an analysis using sliding windows to attempt to determine reversal rates.[18]

Most statistical models of reversals have analyzed them in terms of a Poisson process or other kinds of renewal process. A Poisson process would have, on average, a constant reversal rate, so it is common to use a non-stationary Poisson process. However, compared to a Poisson process, there is a reduced probability of reversal for tens of thousands of years after a reversal. This could be due to an inhibition in the underlying mechanism, or it could just mean that some shorter polarity intervals have been missed.[12] A random reversal pattern with inhibition can be represented by a gamma process. In 2006, a team of physicists at the University of Calabria found that the reversals also conform to a Lévy distribution, which describes stochastic processes with long-ranging correlations between events in time.[19][20] The data are also consistent with a deterministic, but chaotic, process.[21]

Character of transitions

[edit]

Duration

[edit]

Most estimates for the duration of a polarity transition are between 1,000 and 10,000 years,[12] but some estimates are as quick as a human lifetime.[22] During a transition, the magnetic field will not vanish completely, but many poles might form chaotically in different places during reversal, until it stabilizes again.[23][24]

Studies of 16.7-million-year-old lava flows on Steens Mountain, Oregon, indicate that the Earth's magnetic field is capable of shifting at a rate of up to 6 degrees per day.[25] This was initially met with skepticism from paleomagnetists. Even if changes occur that quickly in the core, the mantle—which is a semiconductor—is thought to remove variations with periods less than a few months. A variety of possible rock magnetic mechanisms were proposed that would lead to a false signal.[26] That said, paleomagnetic studies of other sections from the same region (the Oregon Plateau flood basalts) give consistent results.[27][28] It appears that the reversed-to-normal polarity transition that marks the end of Chron C5Cr (16.7 million years ago) contains a series of reversals and excursions.[29] In addition, geologists Scott Bogue of Occidental College and Jonathan Glen of the US Geological Survey, sampling lava flows in Battle Mountain, Nevada, found evidence for a brief, several-year-long interval during a reversal when the field direction changed by over 50 degrees. The reversal was dated to approximately 15 million years ago.[30][31] In 2018, researchers reported a reversal lasting only 200 years.[32] A 2019 paper estimates that the most recent reversal, 780,000 years ago, lasted 22,000 years.[33][34]

Causes

[edit]
NASA computer simulation using the model of Glatzmaier and Roberts.[35] The tubes represent magnetic field lines, blue when the field points towards the center and yellow when away. The rotation axis of the Earth is centered and vertical. The dense clusters of lines are within the Earth's core.[24]

The magnetic field of the Earth, and of other planets that have magnetic fields, is generated by dynamo action in which convection of molten iron in the planetary core generates electric currents which in turn give rise to magnetic fields.[12] In simulations of planetary dynamos, reversals often emerge spontaneously from the underlying dynamics. For example, Gary Glatzmaier and collaborator Paul Roberts of UCLA ran a numerical model of the coupling between electromagnetism and fluid dynamics in the Earth's interior. Their simulation reproduced key features of the magnetic field over more than 40,000 years of simulated time, and the computer-generated field reversed itself.[35][36] Global field reversals at irregular intervals have also been observed in the laboratory liquid metal experiment "VKS2".[37]

In some simulations, this leads to an instability in which the magnetic field spontaneously flips over into the opposite orientation. This scenario is supported by observations of the solar magnetic field, which undergoes spontaneous reversals every 9–12 years. With the Sun it is observed that the solar magnetic intensity greatly increases during a reversal, whereas reversals on Earth seem to occur during periods of low field strength.[38]

Some scientists, such as Richard A. Muller, think that geomagnetic reversals are not spontaneous processes but rather are triggered by external events that directly disrupt the flow in the Earth's core. Proposals include impact events[39][40] or internal events such as the arrival of continental slabs carried down into the mantle by the action of plate tectonics at subduction zones or the initiation of new mantle plumes from the core-mantle boundary.[41] Supporters of this hypothesis hold that any of these events could lead to a large scale disruption of the dynamo, effectively turning off the geomagnetic field. Because the magnetic field is stable in either the present north–south orientation or a reversed orientation, they propose that when the field recovers from such a disruption it spontaneously chooses one state or the other, such that half the recoveries become reversals. This proposed mechanism does not appear to work in a quantitative model, and the evidence from stratigraphy for a correlation between reversals and impact events is weak. There is no evidence for a reversal connected with the impact event that caused the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event.[42]

Effects on biosphere

[edit]

Shortly after the first geomagnetic polarity time scales were produced, scientists began exploring the possibility that reversals could be linked to extinction events.[17] Many such arguments were based on an apparent periodicity in the rate of reversals, but more careful analyses show that the reversal record is not periodic.[18] It may be that the ends of superchrons have caused vigorous convection leading to widespread volcanism, and that the subsequent airborne ash caused extinctions.[43] Tests of correlations between extinctions and reversals are difficult for several reasons. Larger animals are too scarce in the fossil record for good statistics, so paleontologists have analyzed microfossil extinctions. Even microfossil data can be unreliable if there are hiatuses in the fossil record. It can appear that the extinction occurs at the end of a polarity interval when the rest of that polarity interval was simply eroded away.[26] Statistical analysis shows no evidence for a correlation between reversals and extinctions.[44][45]

Most proposals tying reversals to extinction events assume that the Earth's magnetic field would be much weaker during reversals. Possibly the first such hypothesis was that high-energy particles trapped in the Van Allen radiation belt could be liberated and bombard the Earth.[45][46] Detailed calculations confirm that if the Earth's dipole field disappeared entirely (leaving the quadrupole and higher components), most of the atmosphere would become accessible to high-energy particles but would act as a barrier to them, and cosmic ray collisions would produce secondary radiation of beryllium-10 or chlorine-36. A 2012 German study of Greenland ice cores showed a peak of beryllium-10 during a brief complete reversal 41,000 years ago, which led to the magnetic field strength dropping to an estimated 5% of normal during the reversal.[47] There is evidence that this occurs both during secular variation[48][49] and during reversals.[50][51]

A hypothesis by McCormac and Evans assumes that the Earth's field disappears entirely during reversals.[52] They argue that the atmosphere of Mars may have been eroded away by the solar wind because it had no magnetic field to protect it. They predict that ions would be stripped away from Earth's atmosphere above 100 km. Paleointensity measurements show that the magnetic field has not disappeared during reversals. Based on paleointensity data for the last 800,000 years,[53] the magnetopause is still estimated to have been at about three Earth radii during the Brunhes–Matuyama reversal.[45] Even if the internal magnetic field did disappear, the solar wind can induce a magnetic field in the Earth's ionosphere sufficient to shield the surface from energetic particles.[54]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Johnson, Scott K. (11 August 2019). "The last magnetic pole flip saw 22,000 years of weirdness – When the Earth's magnetic poles trade places, they take a while to get sorted". Ars Technica. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
  2. ^ a b Clement, Bradford M. (2004). "Dependence of the duration of geomagnetic polarity reversals on site latitude". Nature. 428 (6983): 637–640. Bibcode:2004Natur.428..637C. doi:10.1038/nature02459. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 15071591. S2CID 4356044.
  3. ^ Glatzmaier, G.A.; Coe, R.S. (2015), "Magnetic Polarity Reversals in the Core", Treatise on Geophysics, Elsevier, pp. 279–295, doi:10.1016/b978-0-444-53802-4.00146-9, ISBN 978-0444538031
  4. ^ Nowaczyk, N.R.; Arz, H.W.; Frank, U.; Kind, J.; Plessen, B. (2012). "Dynamics of the Laschamp geomagnetic excursion from Black Sea sediments". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 351–352: 54–69. Bibcode:2012E&PSL.351...54N. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2012.06.050.
  5. ^ Gubbins, David (1999). "The distinction between geomagnetic excursions and reversals". Geophysical Journal International. 137 (1): F1–F4. doi:10.1046/j.1365-246x.1999.00810.x.
  6. ^ a b c d e Cox, Allan (1973). Plate tectonics and geomagnetic reversal. San Francisco, California: W. H. Freeman. pp. 138–145, 222–228. ISBN 0-7167-0258-4.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Glen, William (1982). The Road to Jaramillo: Critical Years of the Revolution in Earth Science. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-1119-4.
  8. ^ Vine, Frederick J.; Drummond H. Matthews (1963). "Magnetic Anomalies over Oceanic Ridges". Nature. 199 (4897): 947–949. Bibcode:1963Natur.199..947V. doi:10.1038/199947a0. S2CID 4296143.
  9. ^ Cande, S. C.; Kent, D. V. (1995). "Revised calibration of the geomagnetic polarity timescale for the late Cretaceous and Cenozoic". Journal of Geophysical Research. 100 (B4): 6093–6095. Bibcode:1995JGR...100.6093C. doi:10.1029/94JB03098.
  10. ^ "Geomagnetic Polarity Timescale". Ocean Bottom Magnetometry Laboratory. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Archived from the original on August 9, 2016. Retrieved March 23, 2011.
  11. ^ Banerjee, Subir K. (2001-03-02). "When the Compass Stopped Reversing Its Poles". Science. 291 (5509). American Association for the Advancement of Science: 1714–1715. doi:10.1126/science.291.5509.1714. PMID 11253196. S2CID 140556706.
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  13. ^ Courtillot, Vincent (1999). Evolutionary Catastrophes: the Science of Mass Extinctions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-0-521-58392-3. Translated from the French by Joe McClinton.
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  18. ^ a b Lutz, T. M. (1985). "The magnetic reversal record is not periodic". Nature. 317 (6036): 404–407. Bibcode:1985Natur.317..404L. doi:10.1038/317404a0. S2CID 32756319.
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