The earth's geomagnetic field and geolocation of fish:first results of a new approach ...

No abstracts are to be cited without prior reference to the author.Today’s EMF can be described through satellite measurement derived field models (IGRF - International Geomagnetic Reference Field, Figure 1.) The EMF is described by the magnetic elements, visualized in Figure 2. By choosing appropri...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stockhausen, Hagen, Guðbjörnsson, Sigmar
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: ASC 2009 - Theme session B 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.25070318.v1
https://ices-library.figshare.com/articles/conference_contribution/The_earth_s_geomagnetic_field_and_geolocation_of_fish_first_results_of_a_new_approach/25070318/1
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Summary:No abstracts are to be cited without prior reference to the author.Today’s EMF can be described through satellite measurement derived field models (IGRF - International Geomagnetic Reference Field, Figure 1.) The EMF is described by the magnetic elements, visualized in Figure 2. By choosing appropriate elements observed at a given locality, it is in principle possible to determine the geographic position of this locality by comparing these values with the IGRF (see Figure 1). By measuring and storing magnetic element-readings from a registration tag attached to a fish, recovering the tag will potentially enable tracking the migration pattern. The earth is immersed in its EMF – consequently the proposed concept may be applied globally. Limitations of the concept: The EMF varies in a broad range of time-scales. For the present purpose, only short time variations are important (Figure 3). Registered magnetic element-readings must hence be corrected for these variations. For the north Atlantic, time variations ...