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The late Maastrichtian palaeomagnetic pole of the Pacific Plate
Authors:Richard G Gordon
Institution:Department of Geological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60201, USA
Abstract:Summary. The Pacific plate's late Maastrichtian (∼ 69 Ma) palaeomagnetic pole, which constrains the northward motion of the Pacific plate during the Cainozoic and latest Cretaceous, was studied. A recently proposed method for obtaining oceanic plate palaeomagnetic poles by combining dissimilar data was extended to accept, as input, the relative amplitudes of magnetic lineations with different azimuths or widely separated sites or both. Combining late Maastrichtian palaeomagnetic data-the relative amplitudes and skewness of magnetic lineations, palaeolatitudes from a palaeomagnetic study of basalt and sediment in vertical cores, a pole from the inversion of the magnetic anomaly over a seamount, and present locations of equatorial sediment facies—yielded a best fit pole of 71°N, 9°E and a 95 per cent confidence ellipse with the major semiaxis of 6° striking 91° clockwise from north and the minor semiaxis of 2° striking 1° clockwise from north. This best fit pole, when compared to the pole expected if the hotspots have been fixed with respect to the spin axis, demonstrates that the hotspots in the Pacific Ocean have shifted ∼ 10° south with respect to the spin axis during the Cainozoic. This best fit pole, when compared to the best fit Campanian pole of the Pacific plate, demonstrates that the pole wandered rapidly, 1.1° Ma-1, with respect to the Pacific plate during the latest Cretaceous.
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