3.9 Article

The new Permian-Triassic paleomagnetic pole for the East European Platform corrected for inclination shallowing

Journal

IZVESTIYA-PHYSICS OF THE SOLID EARTH
Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 150-162

Publisher

MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1134/S1069351318010068

Keywords

paleomagnetism; inclination shallowing; Permian; Triassic; Elongation-Inclination method; paleomagnetic pole; East European platform

Funding

  1. Russian government [220, 14.Z50.31.0017]
  2. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [15-05-06843]
  3. German Research Foundation [SCHN408/22-1]

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The results of detailed paleomagnetic studies in seven Upper Permian and Lower Triassic reference sections of East Europe (Middle Volga and Orenburg region) and Central Germany are presented. For each section, the coefficient of inclination shallowing f (King, 1955) is estimated by the Elongation-Inclination (E-I) method (Tauxe and Kent, 2004) and is found to vary from 0.4 to 0.9. The paleomagnetic directions, corrected for the inclination shallowing, are used to calculate the new Late Permian-Early Triassic paleomagnetic pole for the East European Platform (N = 7, PLat = 52.1A degrees, PLong = 155.8A degrees, A95 = 6.6A degrees). Based on this pole, the geocentric axial dipole hypothesis close to the Paleozoic/Mesozoic boundary is tested by the single plate method. The absence of the statistically significant distinction between the obtained pole and the average Permian-Triassic (P-Tr) paleomagnetic pole of the Siberian Platform and the coeval pole of the North American Platform corrected for the opening of the Atlantic (Shatsillo et al., 2006) is interpreted by us as evidence that similar to 250 Ma the configuration of the magnetic field of the Earth was predominantly dipolar; i.e., the contribution of nondipole components was at most 10% of the main magnetic field. In our opinion, the hypothesis of the nondipolity of the geomagnetic field at the P-Tr boundary, which has been repeatedly discussed in recent decades (Van der Voo and Torsvik, 2001; Bazhenov and Shatsillo, 2010; Veselovskiy and Pavlov, 2006), resulted from disregarding the effect of inclination shallowing in the paleomagnetic determinations from sedimentary rocks of stable Europe (the East European platform and West European plate).

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