Re: OK Nancy, Where Is It?
Almost Inconceivable Changes in the Geomagnetic Field,
Science Frontiers #101 Sep-Oct 1995, by William R. Corliss
A decade ago, a trio of geophysicists published a
group of papers based on their measurements of the
remnant magnetism of the 16-million-year-old
layered lava flows at Steens Mountain, Oregon.
(SF#45) At that time, they claimed that these finely
bedded lava flows testified that, during a field
reversal, the earth's field swung around at the
astonishing rate of 3° per day! This rate is about
one thousand times the current rate of polar drift.
Mainstream geophysicists could not believe the
3°/day figure because it implied incredibly rapid
changes in the flow of those molten materials
within the earth that supposedly generate the
geomagnetic field. The Steens Mountain data were
"tabled"; that is, dismissed. The three researchers,
though, continued their labors at Steens Mountain
and have now offered additional, even more
impressive data. They now find that the
geomagnetic field probably shifted as much as 6°
in a single day. Their work has been carried
forward so professionally and meticulously that
other scientists are finding their conclusions harder
and harder to dismiss. Instead, the search is on
for explanations of the rapid field changes.
Three possibilities have been advanced - all of
them unpalatable to geophysicists:
- The Steens Mountain rocks are not faithful
recorders of the main geomagnetic field.
Should this be actually so, the whole field of
paleomagnetism, including plate tectonics, is
undermined, for it depends upon similar
measurements.
- The earth's molten core can change rapidly, at
least in some regions, in response to forces still
unrecognized. This, of course, is not really a
satisfying "explanation."
- The dynamo theory of the origin of the
geomagnetic field is incorrect.
Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics
During the 1950's, at least partly driven by the
military need to understand the ocean as the
arena of submarine warfare, intensive studies
of the ocean floor were carried out. It was found
that the center of each major ocean was occupied
by a ridge at whose center was a valley. On each
side of this, parallel stripes of rocks magnetized
in opposite directions were found. The pattern
of stripes on one side was the mirror image of
the pattern on the other side. The reversal of the
earth's magnetic field recorded in the rocks was
repeated on each side of the ridge. This led
H. H. Hess (1960) to propose the idea of sea-floor
spreading. Molten rock is continuously extruded
and cools to form the ridge. As it solidifies, it
records the magnetic field at that time. Since it
spreads to each side of the ridge, each side has
the same record magnetic field record (one is
the mirror image of the other). Since new crust
is being formed at the ridges, it must be
consumed somewhere. Hess proposed that his
happens at deep sea trenches, where oceanic
crust "dives" under a continent.
Q: Since lava hardens quickly, how can the core of the Earth be
dictating a different direction for the magnetic field in the hardening
lava unless the crust is shifted between these great volcanic outbursts
and periods when the oceanic rifts are ripped apart?