Dallanave, Edoardo et al. (2012): Is there a normal magnetic-polarity event during the Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum ( approximately 55 Ma)? Insights from the palaeomagnetic record of the Belluno Basin (Italy)

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 208
ODP 208 1262
Identifier:
2013-013534
georefid

10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05627.x
doi

Creator:
Dallanave, Edoardo
University of Padova, Department of Geosciences, Padova, Italy
author

Muttoni, Giovanni
Alpine Laboratory of Paleomagnetism, Italy
author

Agnini, Claudia
Scripps Institute of Oceanography, United States
author

Tauxe, Lisa
author

Rio, Domenico
author

Identification:
Is there a normal magnetic-polarity event during the Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum ( approximately 55 Ma)? Insights from the palaeomagnetic record of the Belluno Basin (Italy)
2012
Geophysical Journal International
Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society, the Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft and the European Geophysical Society, International
191
2
517-529
In the lowermost Eocene sedimentary record of Ocean Drilling Program Site 1262 (Leg 208, Walvis Ridge, South Atlantic Ocean), the presence of a approximately 53-kyr-long normal polarity event has been recorded within the approximately 2.55-Myr-long reverse polarity Chron C24r ( approximately 53.3-55.9 Ma) and termed Palaeocene-Eocene magnetic reversal (PEMR). The origin of the PEMR has been speculatively related to a change in the Earth's rotation rate that was in turn influenced by an abrupt overturning of the ocean-atmosphere circulation that occurred during the Palaeocene-Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) at approximately 55 Ma. Such provocative genesis for a magnetic-polarity reversal demands the PEMR to be confirmed (or refuted) in additional PETM sections. Here, we present detailed palaeomagnetic and rock-magnetic data from the Forada and Cicogna sections of the Belluno Basin in NE Italy, which contain an expanded and continuous record of the PETM termed clay marl unit (CMU). Our data indicate that these sediments were deposited during a continuous interval of reverse geomagnetic field polarity. We therefore conclude that no magnetic-polarity reversals occurred throughout the PETM. In addition, we studied the origin of the high degree of flattening affecting the characteristic magnetic component directions of the sediments, which we interpret as due to a combination of depositional inclination shallowing typical of detrital haematite, and post-depositional compaction of clays, particularly abundant in the carbonate-depleted CMU. Abstract Copyright (2012), RAS.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:46.0300
West:12.0400East: 12.1400
South:46.0200

Stratigraphy; Atlantic Ocean; Belluno Basin; Cenozoic; Cicogna Italy; Europe; Forada Italy; Italy; Leg 208; magnetic field; magnetic minerals; magnetostratigraphy; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1262; Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum; Paleogene; paleomagnetism; reversals; South Atlantic; Southern Europe; Tertiary; Walvis Ridge;

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