Paleomagnetic Secular Variation and Relative Paleointensity During the Holocene in South China—Huguangyan Maar Lake Revisited

Mei Sheng, Xisheng Wang*, Mark J. Dekkers, Yun Chen, Guoqiang Chu, Ling Tang, Junling Pei, Zhenyu Yang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The scarcity of reliable paleomagnetic secular variation (PSV) records from East Asia especially from low-latitude regions impedes better understanding of global PSV mechanisms. Here we report on a radiocarbon-dated Holocene PSV record from a composite ~6.7-m-long core collected from the high-sedimentation-rate Huguangyan Maar Lake (HML) in subtropical-tropical South China. Rock magnetic results demonstrate that the natural remanent magnetization resides in single-domain magnetite. Alternating field demagnetization experiments at 1-cm spacing on u-channel samples reveal six distinct inclination highs at ~7,500 BCE, ~5,100 BCE, ~4,600 BCE, ~3,600–3,400 BCE, ~1,600–1,200 BCE, and 600–800 CE; three inclination lows at ~4,800 BCE, ~600–300 BCE, and ~1,000–1,300 CE; and three eastward declination trends at ~3,600–3,200 BCE, ~2,600–2,400 BCE, and 400 BCE to 200 CE. The similarity between the HML PSV record and other independently dated records from East Asia and geomagnetic field models corroborates the robustness of our age model and Holocene PSV record. Strikingly, centennial- to millennial-scale PSV features of the HML are comparable, within age uncertainties, with other Holocene records from Europe, North America, and Canada, suggesting that such directional patterns are likely to be hemispheric in scale. Although relative paleointensity data of HML are affected by environmental factors (e.g., organic matter diagenesis), the record still provides a regionally important new PSV reference curve whose conspicuous features may serve as stratigraphic markers for East Asian paleorecords.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2681-2697
Number of pages17
JournalGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Volume20
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2019

Funding

This study was supported by the NSFC (Grants 41274074 and 41371219) and China Geological Survey (Grant DD20160306). The 1-year stay of Mei Sheng at Fort Hoofddijk was funded by the China Scholarship Council. We sincerely thank L. V. de Groot, W. Krijgsman, and C. Langereis for their constructive suggestions. Comprehensive reviews by Huapei Wang, one anonymous reviewer, and the Editor J. Feinberg are greatly appreciated. We are also grateful to Y. L. Su, Z. Y. Gu, and Q. Z. Zhu for their help during the coring campaign and in the laboratory. Data to support the main findings of this article are available in the supporting information.

Keywords

  • East Asia
  • Holocene
  • Northern Hemisphere
  • paleomagnetic secular variation
  • relative paleointensity

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