Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr

The Transantarctic mountains predominantly consist of Jurassic continental flood basalts (Kirkpatrick) and sills (Ferrar) emplaced during the earliest phase of the break-up of Pangea. Published ages, based on a variety of geochronological methods all agree rather well and cluster around 180 Ma sugge...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Gondwana Research
Main Authors: Lemna, O., Bachtadse, V., Kirscher, Uwe, Rolf, C., Petersen, N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42455
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002
id ftcurtin:oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.500.11937/42455
record_format openpolar
spelling ftcurtin:oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.500.11937/42455 2023-06-11T04:05:28+02:00 Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr Lemna, O. Bachtadse, V. Kirscher, Uwe Rolf, C. Petersen, N. 2014 restricted https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42455 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42455 doi:10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002 Journal Article 2014 ftcurtin https://doi.org/20.500.11937/4245510.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002 2023-05-30T19:42:29Z The Transantarctic mountains predominantly consist of Jurassic continental flood basalts (Kirkpatrick) and sills (Ferrar) emplaced during the earliest phase of the break-up of Pangea. Published ages, based on a variety of geochronological methods all agree rather well and cluster around 180 Ma suggesting emplacement during a rather short time interval of not more than 3 Myr. Paleomagnetic studies, mostly carried out between the 60s and 90s of the last century, however, yield two well defined but significantly different groups of paleomagnetic pole positions plotting either in intermediate latitudes (A) or at latitudes exceeding 60°S (B). Pole positions belonging to group A are generally interpreted to be of primary origin whereas the significance of group B poles remains unclear. Here we report new data from the Kirkpatrick basalts of Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica, where 157 oriented paleomagnetic samples were taken, covering about 800 m of stratigraphy and 23 volcanic flows in Gair Mesa (73.4666°S; 162.8666°E). After removal of a steep magnetic overprint with rather low coercivities straight linear segments of exclusively normal polarity trending toward the origin of projection are identified in 151 samples from 22 sites. Maximum unblocking temperatures do not exceed 580 °C and maximum coercivities not 60 mT. The resulting mean virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) for the Gair Mesa plots at 66.4°S; 227.7°E (α95 of 6.2°, k = 25.7) comparable to group B poles. Reflecting light microscopy reveals that the magnetic inventory of all samples analyzed is dominated by magnetite showing shrinking cracks and broad ilmenite lamellae, the latter being diagnostic for high temperature oxidation. Analysis of the distribution of the 22 pole positions obtained here shows that secular variation has successfully been averaged (Sb = 15.9°) suggesting that the rocks studied here have recorded the time averaged geomagnetic field during early mid Jurassic times. Based on these new results we postulate that both clusters A and B of ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica Geomagnetic Pole Victoria Land Curtin University: espace Gair Mesa ENVELOPE(162.867,162.867,-73.467,-73.467) Transantarctic Mountains Victoria Land Gondwana Research 31 124 134
institution Open Polar
collection Curtin University: espace
op_collection_id ftcurtin
language unknown
description The Transantarctic mountains predominantly consist of Jurassic continental flood basalts (Kirkpatrick) and sills (Ferrar) emplaced during the earliest phase of the break-up of Pangea. Published ages, based on a variety of geochronological methods all agree rather well and cluster around 180 Ma suggesting emplacement during a rather short time interval of not more than 3 Myr. Paleomagnetic studies, mostly carried out between the 60s and 90s of the last century, however, yield two well defined but significantly different groups of paleomagnetic pole positions plotting either in intermediate latitudes (A) or at latitudes exceeding 60°S (B). Pole positions belonging to group A are generally interpreted to be of primary origin whereas the significance of group B poles remains unclear. Here we report new data from the Kirkpatrick basalts of Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica, where 157 oriented paleomagnetic samples were taken, covering about 800 m of stratigraphy and 23 volcanic flows in Gair Mesa (73.4666°S; 162.8666°E). After removal of a steep magnetic overprint with rather low coercivities straight linear segments of exclusively normal polarity trending toward the origin of projection are identified in 151 samples from 22 sites. Maximum unblocking temperatures do not exceed 580 °C and maximum coercivities not 60 mT. The resulting mean virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) for the Gair Mesa plots at 66.4°S; 227.7°E (α95 of 6.2°, k = 25.7) comparable to group B poles. Reflecting light microscopy reveals that the magnetic inventory of all samples analyzed is dominated by magnetite showing shrinking cracks and broad ilmenite lamellae, the latter being diagnostic for high temperature oxidation. Analysis of the distribution of the 22 pole positions obtained here shows that secular variation has successfully been averaged (Sb = 15.9°) suggesting that the rocks studied here have recorded the time averaged geomagnetic field during early mid Jurassic times. Based on these new results we postulate that both clusters A and B of ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lemna, O.
Bachtadse, V.
Kirscher, Uwe
Rolf, C.
Petersen, N.
spellingShingle Lemna, O.
Bachtadse, V.
Kirscher, Uwe
Rolf, C.
Petersen, N.
Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
author_facet Lemna, O.
Bachtadse, V.
Kirscher, Uwe
Rolf, C.
Petersen, N.
author_sort Lemna, O.
title Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
title_short Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
title_full Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
title_fullStr Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
title_full_unstemmed Paleomagnetism of the Jurassic Transantarctic Mountains revisited - Evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3Myr
title_sort paleomagnetism of the jurassic transantarctic mountains revisited - evidence for large dispersion of apparent polar wander within less than 3myr
publishDate 2014
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42455
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.867,162.867,-73.467,-73.467)
geographic Gair Mesa
Transantarctic Mountains
Victoria Land
geographic_facet Gair Mesa
Transantarctic Mountains
Victoria Land
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Geomagnetic Pole
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Geomagnetic Pole
Victoria Land
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42455
doi:10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.11937/4245510.1016/j.gr.2015.01.002
container_title Gondwana Research
container_volume 31
container_start_page 124
op_container_end_page 134
_version_ 1768376024637112320