Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest

In the United States Southwest in the early 1960s, an academic lineage began utilizing the techniques of paleomagnetism and geomagnetism for applications in archaeology. However, most of the research was conducted with an enterprise mindset, resulting in few published data that are often embedded in...

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Main Author: Jones, Shelby Anne
Other Authors: Tauxe, Lisa
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1fq1p8b5
https://escholarship.org/content/qt1fq1p8b5/qt1fq1p8b5.pdf
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt1fq1p8b5 2024-09-15T18:07:27+00:00 Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest Jones, Shelby Anne Tauxe, Lisa 2022-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1fq1p8b5 https://escholarship.org/content/qt1fq1p8b5/qt1fq1p8b5.pdf en eng eScholarship, University of California qt1fq1p8b5 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1fq1p8b5 https://escholarship.org/content/qt1fq1p8b5/qt1fq1p8b5.pdf public Geology Archaeology Geophysics Archaeomagnetism etd 2022 ftcdlib 2024-06-28T06:28:22Z In the United States Southwest in the early 1960s, an academic lineage began utilizing the techniques of paleomagnetism and geomagnetism for applications in archaeology. However, most of the research was conducted with an enterprise mindset, resulting in few published data that are often embedded in hard-to-find and hard-to-access archaeological reports, limiting the work’s accessibility to geomagnetic researchers. Furthermore, when published, the results were generally averaged at the site level using statistical conventions different from today’s standards, limiting the data’s comparability and (re)usability. The outcome was that only small subsets of nearly six decades of archaeomagnetic measurement and research could be (re)used for geomagnetic applications, like global field modeling and archaeomagnetic dating curve development. Moreover, the development of applications of archaeomagnetism to answer questions related feature use and function stalled. This thesis undertakes an archival study to salvage and collate surviving data and metadata for archaeointensity and archaeodirectional records. The goal was accessibility, with an understanding of the limitations and quality of the dataset, where possible. The work resulted in the compilation of 131 previously published archaeointensity values, the addition of 54 new archaeointensity values (of which 8 are considered high quality), and the digitization of measurement data for over 51,000 specimens from over 5,377 archaeodirectional sites. The compilation resulted in confirmation that the data from the various laboratories are able to be treated and used as one dataset, without any systematic biases. The archaeodirectional dataset was filtered for quality, and the highest quality 223 data with reliable chronology were included in the development of a new virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) reference curve for the last 2000 years for the Four Corners region of the United States Southwest. Finally, I build on the work of Wulf Gose, applying the techniques of ... Thesis Geomagnetic Pole University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Geology
Archaeology
Geophysics
Archaeomagnetism
spellingShingle Geology
Archaeology
Geophysics
Archaeomagnetism
Jones, Shelby Anne
Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
topic_facet Geology
Archaeology
Geophysics
Archaeomagnetism
description In the United States Southwest in the early 1960s, an academic lineage began utilizing the techniques of paleomagnetism and geomagnetism for applications in archaeology. However, most of the research was conducted with an enterprise mindset, resulting in few published data that are often embedded in hard-to-find and hard-to-access archaeological reports, limiting the work’s accessibility to geomagnetic researchers. Furthermore, when published, the results were generally averaged at the site level using statistical conventions different from today’s standards, limiting the data’s comparability and (re)usability. The outcome was that only small subsets of nearly six decades of archaeomagnetic measurement and research could be (re)used for geomagnetic applications, like global field modeling and archaeomagnetic dating curve development. Moreover, the development of applications of archaeomagnetism to answer questions related feature use and function stalled. This thesis undertakes an archival study to salvage and collate surviving data and metadata for archaeointensity and archaeodirectional records. The goal was accessibility, with an understanding of the limitations and quality of the dataset, where possible. The work resulted in the compilation of 131 previously published archaeointensity values, the addition of 54 new archaeointensity values (of which 8 are considered high quality), and the digitization of measurement data for over 51,000 specimens from over 5,377 archaeodirectional sites. The compilation resulted in confirmation that the data from the various laboratories are able to be treated and used as one dataset, without any systematic biases. The archaeodirectional dataset was filtered for quality, and the highest quality 223 data with reliable chronology were included in the development of a new virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) reference curve for the last 2000 years for the Four Corners region of the United States Southwest. Finally, I build on the work of Wulf Gose, applying the techniques of ...
author2 Tauxe, Lisa
format Thesis
author Jones, Shelby Anne
author_facet Jones, Shelby Anne
author_sort Jones, Shelby Anne
title Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
title_short Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
title_full Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
title_fullStr Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
title_full_unstemmed Archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader American Southwest
title_sort archaeomagnetism and its applications in the broader american southwest
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2022
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1fq1p8b5
https://escholarship.org/content/qt1fq1p8b5/qt1fq1p8b5.pdf
genre Geomagnetic Pole
genre_facet Geomagnetic Pole
op_relation qt1fq1p8b5
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