Palaeomagnetic field intensity measurements from the 2.6 Ga Yandinilling dyke swarm (Western Australia)
Авторы: Hawkins L., Biggin A., Liu Y. et al
2024 г.
Geophys.J.Int.
Precambrian palaeointensity measurements provide fundamental constraints on the evolution
of the deep Earth. Core evolution models predict trends in dipole moment on billion-year
timescales that can be tested by palaeomagnetic records. Here, we report new palaeointensity
results from the recently identified ∼2.62 Ga Yandinilling dyke swarm of the Yilgarn Craton,
Western Australia, and consider them alongside published measurements spanning 500 Myr
across the late Archaean to earliest Proterozoic. Rock magnetic and scanning electron microscopy analysis confirm that the magnetic mineralogy is fine-grained magnetite, appearing
mostly as exsolved lamellae with ilmenite. Six sites produced acceptable palaeointensity
estimates from thermal and microwave IZZI protocol Thellier experiments and from doubleheating technique Shaw experiments. These site mean values of 9–26 μT translate to virtual
dipole moments of 11–44 ZAm2 that are considerably lower than today’s dipole moment of
∼80 ZAm2 and the value predicted for this time period by some thermal evolution models.
Their average (median = 41 ZAm2) is, however, similar to the long-term average during both
of the intervals 2300–2800 Ma (median = 44 ZAm2; N = 103) and 10–500 Ma (median 41
ZAm2; N = 997). While there is little evidence for a substantial net change in average dipole
moment between the late Archaean and Phanerozoic, there is preliminary evidence that its
variance has increased between the two intervals. This lower variance more than two billion
years ago supports the idea that the geodynamo, even while not producing a stronger magnetic
field, was more stable on average at the Archaean–Proterozoic transition than it is today
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