Long-term persistency of a strong non-dipole field in the South Atlantic.
Primeiro Autor | 47. Oliveira, W. P. |
Autores | Oliveira, W. P. ; Hartmann, G. A. ; Terra-Nova, F. ; Pasqualon, N. G. ; Savian, J. F. ; Lima, E. F. ; Luz, F. R. & Trindade, R. I. |
Resumo | Earth’s magnetic field exhibits a dominant dipole morphology. Notwithstanding, significant deviations from the dipole are evident today, particularly the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), characterized by anomalously low-field intensity and high directional variability, diminishing the field’s shielding effect. To assess the persistence of SAA-like features over multimillion-year scales, we combine paleomagnetic data from Trindade Island (20°30’S, 29°22’W) with an evaluation of paleosecular variation (PSV) over the past 10 Myr. We employ synthetic models to explore how the position and intensity of magnetic flux patches at the core-mantle boundary can influence the long-term field behavior. Here we present results that reveal anomalous field signatures in the South Atlantic and the Atlantic-Pacific hemispheric asymmetries are enduring features, likely linked to a bottom-up control of PSV by the inner core’s heterogeneities but with contributions from mantle anomalies in the long-time range. |
Programa | Geofísica |
Ano de publicação | 2024 |
Tipo de publicação | Artigo publicado em revista |
Nome da revista/jornal | Nature Communications |
Localidade | Publicação Internacional |
Volume | 15 |
Número | 1 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53688-2 |
Página web | https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-53688-2 |