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Age of the Laschamp excursion determined by U-Th dating of a speleothem geomagnetic record from North America

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Lascu, I 
Feinberg, JM 
Dorale, JA 
Cheng, H 
Edwards, RL 

Abstract

The Laschamp geomagnetic excursion was the first short-lived polarity event recognized and described in the paleomagnetic record, and to date remains the most studied geomagnetic event of its kind. In addition to its geophysical significance, the Laschamp is an important global geochronologic marker. The Laschamp excursion occurred around the time of the demise of Homo neanderthalensis, in conjunction with high-amplitude, rapid climatic oscillations leading into the Last Glacial Maximum, and coeval with a major supervolcano eruption in the Mediterranean. Thus, precise determination of the timing and duration of the Laschamp excursion would help in elucidating major scientific questions situated at the intersection of geology, paleoclimatology, and anthropology. Here we present a North American speleothem geomagnetic record of the Laschamp excursion that is directly dated using a combination of high-precision 230Th dates and annual layer counting using confocal microscopy. We have determined a maximum excursion duration that spans the interval 42,250-39,700 yr BP, and an age of 41,100 ± 350 yr BP for the main phase of the excursion, during which the virtual geomagnetic pole was situated at the southernmost latitude in the record. Our chronology provides the first age bracketing of the Laschamp excursion using radioisotopic dating, and improves on previous age determinations based on 40Ar/39Ar dating of lava flows, and orbitally-tuned sedimentary and ice-core records.

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Keywords

3709 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience, 37 Earth Sciences, 3703 Geochemistry, 3705 Geology, 3706 Geophysics

Journal Title

Geology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0091-7613
1943-2682

Volume Title

44

Publisher

Geological Society of America
Sponsorship
This project was funded by NSF-EAR grant 1316385, a University of Minnesota McKnight Land Grant Professorship to JMF, and ERC grant 320750. Confocal microscopy was performed at the University of Minnesota Imaging Centers. We are grateful to John Geissman, Brad Singer, and James Channell for their constructive reviews. This is Institute for Rock Magnetism contribution 1506.