Paleomagnetic records from globally distributed locations are essential for fully understanding geomagnetic field variations,particularly non-dipole field fluctuations[1].Paleomagnetic studies on historical time scale...Paleomagnetic records from globally distributed locations are essential for fully understanding geomagnetic field variations,particularly non-dipole field fluctuations[1].Paleomagnetic studies on historical time scales have demonstrated the existence of persistent geomagnetic flux patches,such as the Canadian(North America)and Siberian(East Asia)flux lobes,which may result from an organizing structure imposed on the geomagnetic field by lower mantle heterogeneity[2].Holocene paleomagnetic secular variations,reconstructed from the Alaskan margin of the Subarctic Pacific Ocean(SPO)[3]and revealed by dynamo modeling[4],further suggest that time-varying flux expulsions on the core-mantle boundary recurrently occur in high-latitude locations(Fig.la).展开更多
基金the National Natural Science Foundation of China(41874078,41806063,and U1606401)the National Key Research&Development Program of China(2016YFA061903)+4 种基金National Program on Global Change and AirSea Interaction(GASI-GEOGE-03)the Open Fund of the Key Laboratory of Marine Geology and Environment,Chinese Academy of Sciences(MGE2018KG05)Laboratory for Marine Geology,Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology(Qingdao)(MGQNLM201818),SIGEPAX(03F0704A)State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology,Tongji University(MGK1826)Shenzhen Science and Technology Program(KQTD20170810111725321)。
文摘Paleomagnetic records from globally distributed locations are essential for fully understanding geomagnetic field variations,particularly non-dipole field fluctuations[1].Paleomagnetic studies on historical time scales have demonstrated the existence of persistent geomagnetic flux patches,such as the Canadian(North America)and Siberian(East Asia)flux lobes,which may result from an organizing structure imposed on the geomagnetic field by lower mantle heterogeneity[2].Holocene paleomagnetic secular variations,reconstructed from the Alaskan margin of the Subarctic Pacific Ocean(SPO)[3]and revealed by dynamo modeling[4],further suggest that time-varying flux expulsions on the core-mantle boundary recurrently occur in high-latitude locations(Fig.la).