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Carracedo & Soler 1995
Carracedo, J.C. and Soler, V. (1995). Anomalously shallow palaeomagnetic inclinations and the question of the age of the Canarian Archipelago. Geophysical Journal International 122(2): 393-406. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-246X.1995.tb07003.x .
Extensive geological, geophysical and geochronological data available from the Canary Islands establish conclusively that formation of the oldest subaerial volcanic structure of the islands began during the Miocene. A mid-Cretaceous age for these volcanic formations has been postulated in previous works on the basis of palaeomagnetic determinations. The results obtained in the present palaeomagnetic study of Lanzarote include analysis of the record of variations of magnetic inclination in boreholes that penetrate the whole of the oldest volcanic series. They show that the excessive age previously assigned to these formations is due to the utilization of volcanic units with abnormally low (<15 degrees) magnetic inclinations (LGIs). In Lanzarote, lavas exhibiting LGIs appear interbedded in a volcanic series that, overall, shows a typical Miocene inclination (similar to 45 degrees). The units stratigraphically beneath and above the LGI horizons give, in fact, directions consistent with the Middle-Upper Miocene field direction (D = 359 degrees, I = 45 degrees, with k = 29, a(95) = 6.7 degrees and a palaeopole of 87 degrees N, 178 degrees E), thereby confirming the Miocene age of the oldest subaerial volcanics of Lanzarote. Short excursions of the geomagnetic field seem likely to be the explanation for these LGIs, since other factors such as tectonic tilting, post-eruptive modification of the primary remanence or errors in sample orientation can be disregarded. The detection in the Canary Archipelago of volcanic units with abnormally low magnetic inclinations seems to be related to the relatively continuous record of the geomagnetic field in rapidly growing volcanic edifices, as seems to be indicated by the presence of a few (usually one or two) short polarity events in volcanic suites of several hundred metres thickness.
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Keywords
canary islands, geochronology, geomagnetic excursions, lanzarote, paleomagnetism, geomagnetic polarity history, potassium-argon ages, volcanic stratigraphy, islands, eruption, fuerteventura, magnetization, pyroclastics, lanzarote, reversal
Journal
Geophysical Journal International
http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/servlet/useragent?func=showIssues&code=gji&journal=gji
Publisher
Blackwell Science Ltd.
Osney Mead
Oxford OX2 0EL
U.K.
+44-1865-206206
+44-1865-721205
journals.cs@blacksci.co.uk
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