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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Masako Tominaga

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Publications
»12. Seismic interpretation of pelagic sedimentation regimes in the 18-53 Ma eastern equatorial Pacific: basin-scale sedimentation and infilling of abyssal valleys
»11. Revised Pacific M-anomaly Geomagnetic Polarity Time Scale
»10. Lava Deposition History in ODP Hole 1256D: Insights from Log-based Volcanostratigraphy
»9. Origin of the smooth zone in early Cretaceous North Atlantic magnetic anomalies
»8. Determination of the volcanostratigraphy of oceanic crust formed at superfast spreading ridge: Electrofacies analyses of ODP/IODP Hole 1256D
»7. Paleomagnetic and rock magnetic results from lower crustal rocks of IODP Site U1309: Implication for thermal and accretion history of the Atlantis Massif
» 6. Deep-tow magnetic anomaly study of the Pacific Jurassic Quiet Zone and implications for the geomagnetic polarity reversal timescale and geomagnetic field behavior
»5. Velocity structure of upper ocean crust at Ocean Drilling Program Site 1256
»4. Drilling to Gabbro in Intact Ocean Crust
»3. Origin of the Pacific Jurassic quiet zone
»2. Paleomagnetism of the igneous section, Hoke 1213B, Shatsky Rise
»1. Shear-type borehole wall shifts induced during lost circulations


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Maurice A. Tivey, William W. Sager, Sang-Mook Lee, and Masako Tominaga, 3. Origin of the Pacific Jurassic quiet zone, Geology, 2006 (v.34; no.9; 789-792)

Understanding the marine magnetic anomaly record is critical for constructing realistic geodynamo models of global geomagnetic field, polarity reversal mechanisms, and longterm geomagnetic field behavior. One of the least understood portions of the marine magnetic anomaly record is also the oldest part of the record, the Jurassic quiet zone (JQZ), where anomalies become weak and difficult to correlate. The reason for the existence of the JQZ is unclear. It has been suggested that the JQZ is a true polarity superchron, similar to the Cretaceous normal superchron. Continental magnetostratigraphic studies have suggested that the JQZ is a period of rapid polarity reversal, of low field intensity, or both. We show results of a deep-tow survey of Pacific Jurassic crust that confirms the existence of magnetic anomalies within the JQZ. We tie Ocean Drilling Program Hole 801C (167.4 Ma) into the record and show that seafloor-spreading magnetic anomalies are present around the hole and extend to 170 Ma crust. We find a rise in reversal rate with increasing age with reversal rates over 10 rev/m.y. at 160 Ma and at 167 Ma. Anomaly amplitudes decrease in the record from 155 Ma until 162 Ma, where low-amplitude anomalies are difficult to correlate. Prior to 167 Ma, anomalies regain amplitude and remain strong until the end of our record at 170 Ma. The JQZ thus appears to be a combination of low-amplitude magnetic anomalies combined with rapid field fluctuations, which could be due to either intensity or polarity changes.

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