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polar reversal
(redirected from Geomagnetic reversal)

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polar reversal

Change in polarity of Earth's magnetic field. Like all magnets, Earth's magnetic field has two opposing regions, or poles, positioned approximately near geographical North and South Poles. During a period of normal polarity the region of attraction corresponds with the North Pole. Today, a compass needle, like other magnetic materials, aligns itself parallel to the magnetizing force and points to the North Pole. During a period of reversed polarity, the region of attraction would change to the South Pole and the needle of a compass would point south.

Studies of the magnetism retained in rocks at the time of their formation (like small compasses frozen in time) have shown that the polarity of the magnetic field has reversed repeatedly throughout geological time.

The reason for polar reversals is not known. Although the average time between reversals over the last 10 million years has been 250,000 years, the rate of reversal has changed continuously over geological time. The most recent reversal was 780,000 years ago; scientists have no way of predicting when the next reversal will occur. The reversal process probably takes a few thousand years. Dating rocks using distinctive sequences of magnetic reversals is called magnetic stratigraphy.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
One sign of this comes from patterns of geomagnetic reversals, when Earth's north and south magnetic poles swap positions.
Their MHD model had produced a geomagnetic reversal entirely on its own, without any provocation from the experimenters.
But even as their databases grew, the study of geomagnetic reversals foundered for lack of new theories to guide the research.
 
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