A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran

Paleomagnetic studies suggest that Laurentia moved from the equator to the pole and then back again within ~60 Ma during the Ediacaran. Hypotheses to explain the large 90⁰ apparent oscillations include unreliable paleomagnetic data and/or unreliable dating and complex magnetic field behaviour. Inert...

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Main Author: Farrell, Sarah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Memorial University of Newfoundland 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/
https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/1/thesis.pdf
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spelling ftmemorialuniv:oai:research.library.mun.ca:14056 2023-10-01T03:57:35+02:00 A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran Farrell, Sarah 2019-10 application/pdf https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/ https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/1/thesis.pdf en eng Memorial University of Newfoundland https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/1/thesis.pdf Farrell, Sarah <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Farrell=3ASarah=3A=3A.html> (2019) A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland. thesis_license Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftmemorialuniv 2023-09-03T06:49:35Z Paleomagnetic studies suggest that Laurentia moved from the equator to the pole and then back again within ~60 Ma during the Ediacaran. Hypotheses to explain the large 90⁰ apparent oscillations include unreliable paleomagnetic data and/or unreliable dating and complex magnetic field behaviour. Inertial interchange true polar wander (IITPW) has also been suggested. Since IITPW would be a global event, it would require the large oscillations suggested by the paleomagnetic record of Laurentia to have affected all the continents in the Ediacaran. Such oscillations have been found in selected paleomagnetic data from Baltica and West Africa but not Australia. Avalonia paleomagnetism also does not appear to show the oscillations expected from the IITPW hypothesis. The present study provides new paleomagnetic data for the Marystown Group volcanics, dated at 580±3 Ma, collected near Grand Bank in the Avalon Zone of Newfoundland. The volcanics were studied with alternating field and thermal demagnetization which showed that remanence is carried mostly by magnetite rather than hematite. Seven sites provide stable remanence directions with mean tilt-corrected declination and inclination of D=287⁰ and I=58⁰ (α95 = 13.7⁰). A positive conglomerate test, using rhyolitic crystal lithic tuff clasts from an agglomerate within the section of flows, shows that the magnetite-bearing clasts carry primary remanence. Magnetic polarity reversals are also present within the section (six normal flows and one reversed flow). The corresponding paleolatitude is 39⁰+17/-13⁰ at 580±3 Ma. This agrees with the paleolatitude of 35⁰+11/-10⁰ at 580±10 Ma previously found for three basalt flows and five red bed sites in the Marystown Group (omitting the likely Devonian Famine Back Cove basalts). The Marystown Group results, along with other stable paleomagnetic data from Avalonia, suggest that Avalonia remained at mid to low latitudes during the mid-Ediacaran. The declination of Avalonia suggests that it remained at 225⁰ from 606 Ma to 592 Ma and ... Thesis Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository Back Cove ENVELOPE(-55.663,-55.663,52.403,52.403)
institution Open Polar
collection Memorial University of Newfoundland: Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmemorialuniv
language English
description Paleomagnetic studies suggest that Laurentia moved from the equator to the pole and then back again within ~60 Ma during the Ediacaran. Hypotheses to explain the large 90⁰ apparent oscillations include unreliable paleomagnetic data and/or unreliable dating and complex magnetic field behaviour. Inertial interchange true polar wander (IITPW) has also been suggested. Since IITPW would be a global event, it would require the large oscillations suggested by the paleomagnetic record of Laurentia to have affected all the continents in the Ediacaran. Such oscillations have been found in selected paleomagnetic data from Baltica and West Africa but not Australia. Avalonia paleomagnetism also does not appear to show the oscillations expected from the IITPW hypothesis. The present study provides new paleomagnetic data for the Marystown Group volcanics, dated at 580±3 Ma, collected near Grand Bank in the Avalon Zone of Newfoundland. The volcanics were studied with alternating field and thermal demagnetization which showed that remanence is carried mostly by magnetite rather than hematite. Seven sites provide stable remanence directions with mean tilt-corrected declination and inclination of D=287⁰ and I=58⁰ (α95 = 13.7⁰). A positive conglomerate test, using rhyolitic crystal lithic tuff clasts from an agglomerate within the section of flows, shows that the magnetite-bearing clasts carry primary remanence. Magnetic polarity reversals are also present within the section (six normal flows and one reversed flow). The corresponding paleolatitude is 39⁰+17/-13⁰ at 580±3 Ma. This agrees with the paleolatitude of 35⁰+11/-10⁰ at 580±10 Ma previously found for three basalt flows and five red bed sites in the Marystown Group (omitting the likely Devonian Famine Back Cove basalts). The Marystown Group results, along with other stable paleomagnetic data from Avalonia, suggest that Avalonia remained at mid to low latitudes during the mid-Ediacaran. The declination of Avalonia suggests that it remained at 225⁰ from 606 Ma to 592 Ma and ...
format Thesis
author Farrell, Sarah
spellingShingle Farrell, Sarah
A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
author_facet Farrell, Sarah
author_sort Farrell, Sarah
title A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
title_short A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
title_full A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
title_fullStr A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
title_full_unstemmed A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
title_sort paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 ma volcanics near grand bank, avalon zone of newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran
publisher Memorial University of Newfoundland
publishDate 2019
url https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/
https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/1/thesis.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.663,-55.663,52.403,52.403)
geographic Back Cove
geographic_facet Back Cove
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation https://research.library.mun.ca/14056/1/thesis.pdf
Farrell, Sarah <https://research.library.mun.ca/view/creator_az/Farrell=3ASarah=3A=3A.html> (2019) A paleomagnetic study of ca. 580 Ma volcanics near Grand Bank, Avalon zone of Newfoundland, and implications for true polar wander in the ediacaran. Masters thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
op_rights thesis_license
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