Riisager, Peter et al. (2004): Early Cretaceous Pacific palaeomagnetic pole from Ontong Java Plateau basement rocks

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 192
ODP 192 1184
Identifier:
2006-012370
georefid

Creator:
Riisager, Peter
Danish Lithosphere Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark
author

Hall, Stuart
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Antretter, Maria
University of Oregon, United States
author

Zhao, Xixi
University of Leicester, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Early Cretaceous Pacific palaeomagnetic pole from Ontong Java Plateau basement rocks
2004
In: Fitton, J. Godfrey (editor), Mahoney, John J. (editor), Wallace, Paul J. (editor), Saunders, Andrew D. (editor), Origin and evolution of the Ontong Java Plateau
Geological Society of London, London, United Kingdom
229
31-44
We present new palaeomagnetic data from Ocean Drilling Program Site 1184 on the eastern salient of the Ontong Java Plateau (OJP) where 337.7 m of Early Cretaceous (c. 120 Ma) volcaniclastic rocks were drilled. Alternating field and thermal demagnetizations were equally effective in removing secondary components, allowing the characteristic remanent magnetization directions from a total of 173 samples (out of 183) to be defined. All samples have negative inclinations (normal polarity), and by treating each sample as an independent reading of the palaeomagnetic field a site-mean inclination of -53.9 degrees (N = 173; alpha (sub 95) = 1.0 degrees , k = 109) was obtained. The corresponding palaeo-colatitude is in excellent accordance with previously published time-averaged palaeo-colatitudes from contemporaneous basalts drilled at OJP and the Nauru Basin. Based on the intersection of the seven palaeo-colatitudes a new Early Cretaceous (c. 120 Ma) Pacific palaeomagnetic pole was obtained with coordinates 63.0 degrees N, 10.1 degrees E (95% confidence ellipse with a minor semi-axis of 2.9 degrees with an azimuth of 32 degrees and a major semi-axis of 47.7 degrees with an azimuth of 122 degrees ). This pole is far more easterly than previously published Early Cretaceous Pacific palaeomagnetic poles. Based on published Pacific palaeogeographic reconstructions in the fixed hotspot reference frame we were able to calculate different Pacific true polar wander (TPW) poles. All Pacific TPW poles are found to be statistically different from contemporaneous TPW poles obtained in the Indo-Atlantic realm, illustrating motion between the two groups of hot spots.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:5.0000
West:155.0000East: 165.0000
South:-5.0000

Solid-earth geophysics; apparent polar wandering; basalts; basement; Cretaceous; demagnetization; hot spots; igneous rocks; Leg 192; Lower Cretaceous; maghemite; magnetic inclination; magnetization; Mesozoic; Nauru Basin; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1184; Ontong Java Plateau; oxides; Pacific Ocean; paleolatitude; paleomagnetism; plate tectonics; pole positions; remanent magnetization; volcanic rocks; West Pacific;

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