Authors
Hervé Guillou, Brad S Singer, Carlo Laj, Catherine Kissel, Stéphane Scaillet, Brian R Jicha
Publication date
2004/11/15
Journal
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume
227
Issue
3-4
Pages
331-343
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The Laschamp geomagnetic excursion is a critical tie-point found directly in deep-sea sediment cores and revealed in polar ice as an abrupt change in the rate of cosmogenic nuclide flux. Despite the importance of this excursion to quantifying paleoclimate proxy records archived in sediment and ice, and to providing an independent calibration of the radiocarbon calendar, its timing remains poorly known. Previous K–Ar, 40Ar/39Ar, and U–Th isochron determinations from lava flows at the type locality in the Massif Central, France, vary widely, are imprecise, and suggest a mean age of about 46.2±2.5 ka (±2σ). Results of 6 new unspiked K–Ar and 13 40Ar/39Ar incremental heating experiments on subsamples from three sites on the Laschamp and Olby flows are concordant and give a weighted mean age of 40.4±1.1 ka (2σ uncertainty including analytical sources only) that is 10% younger than the previous estimates …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
H Guillou, BS Singer, C Laj, C Kissel, S Scaillet… - Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2004