Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5779537 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2017 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
On millennial timescales WINPSV-12K correlates well with other records from Western Europe and the northern North Atlantic to a resolution of â¼1 kyr, given age uncertainties and spatial variability between records. WINPSV-12K also compares well to the CALS10k.2 and pfm9k.1a model predictions for Windermere. Key regionally-significant PSV inclination features of WINPSV-12K which correlate with other North Atlantic records include peaks at 5-6, 8.5, and 10 calâkaâBP, and a trough at 7âcalâkaâBP. Key PSV declination features include the eastward swing from 5.5-2.3 calâkaâBP followed by a major westward excursion at 2.3 calâkaâBP, peaks at 1.1 and 7 calâkaâBP, and troughs at 5.4 and 8.2 calâkaâBP, with the caveat that an estimated magnetic lock-in delay of at least 100-200 yr is present. PSV variations on 1-3 kyr timescales are interpreted to represent strengthening and weakening of the North American versus the Siberian and European-Mediterranean high-latitude flux lobes, based on the close similarities between the North Atlantic regional records and the antiphase existing in the East Asian Stack record and the North East Pacific inclination stack. WINPSV-12K provides a regionally-important new PSV reference curve whose prominent features may serve as stratigraphic markers for North Atlantic paleo-records.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
Rachael S. Avery, Chuang Xuan, Alan E.S. Kemp, Jonathan M. Bull, Carol J. Cotterill, J. James Fielding, Richard B. Pearce, Ian W. Croudace,