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Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review

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Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review. / Di Chiara, A.
Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past: New Data, Applications and Recent Advances. ed. / E. Tema; A. Di Chiara; E. Herrero-Bervera. Geological Society of London, 2020. p. 127-141 (Geological Society Special Publication ; Vol. 497).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)peer-review

Harvard

Di Chiara, A 2020, Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review. in E Tema, A Di Chiara & E Herrero-Bervera (eds), Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past: New Data, Applications and Recent Advances. Geological Society Special Publication , vol. 497, Geological Society of London, pp. 127-141. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP497-2019-51

APA

Di Chiara, A. (2020). Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review. In E. Tema, A. Di Chiara, & E. Herrero-Bervera (Eds.), Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past: New Data, Applications and Recent Advances (pp. 127-141). (Geological Society Special Publication ; Vol. 497). Geological Society of London. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP497-2019-51

Vancouver

Di Chiara A. Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review. In Tema E, Di Chiara A, Herrero-Bervera E, editors, Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past: New Data, Applications and Recent Advances. Geological Society of London. 2020. p. 127-141. (Geological Society Special Publication ). Epub 2020 Apr 8. doi: 10.1144/SP497-2019-51

Author

Di Chiara, A. / Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene : a review. Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past: New Data, Applications and Recent Advances. editor / E. Tema ; A. Di Chiara ; E. Herrero-Bervera. Geological Society of London, 2020. pp. 127-141 (Geological Society Special Publication ).

Bibtex

@inbook{e04bf0dd217948b8abc0f30cd9b88cdf,
title = "Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene: a review",
abstract = "The importance of the full understanding of the Holocene geomagnetic field spans from human history and archaeology, to palaeoclimatic changes and engineering, to geomagnetic field modelling and unravelling of the geomagnetic field characteristics and anomalies. Unfortunately, the dearth of data from large under-covered areas such as oceans, the African and South American continents, and the southern hemisphere (only 4–6% of the global datasets) dramatically limits our knowledge of the temporal and spatial evolution of the geomagnetic field and its application. Here, a review of all data from the African continent is presented in order to encourage and motivate a new generation of palaeomagnetic and archaeomagnetic studies. New data will sharpen the palaeomagnetism as a dating tool, improve our knowledge of local/global geomagnetic features, and will help to finally answer some of the fundamental questions in palaeomagnetism, like the temporal and spatial distribution of the palaeointensity peaks described, and the origin and evolution of the South Atlantic Anomaly. {\textcopyright} 2020 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London. All rights reserved.",
author = "{Di Chiara}, A.",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "17",
doi = "10.1144/SP497-2019-51",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781786204738",
series = "Geological Society Special Publication ",
publisher = "Geological Society of London",
pages = "127--141",
editor = "E. Tema and {Di Chiara}, A. and E. Herrero-Bervera",
booktitle = "Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past",
address = "United Kingdom",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Palaeosecular variations of the geomagnetic field in Africa during the holocene

T2 - a review

AU - Di Chiara, A.

PY - 2020/9/17

Y1 - 2020/9/17

N2 - The importance of the full understanding of the Holocene geomagnetic field spans from human history and archaeology, to palaeoclimatic changes and engineering, to geomagnetic field modelling and unravelling of the geomagnetic field characteristics and anomalies. Unfortunately, the dearth of data from large under-covered areas such as oceans, the African and South American continents, and the southern hemisphere (only 4–6% of the global datasets) dramatically limits our knowledge of the temporal and spatial evolution of the geomagnetic field and its application. Here, a review of all data from the African continent is presented in order to encourage and motivate a new generation of palaeomagnetic and archaeomagnetic studies. New data will sharpen the palaeomagnetism as a dating tool, improve our knowledge of local/global geomagnetic features, and will help to finally answer some of the fundamental questions in palaeomagnetism, like the temporal and spatial distribution of the palaeointensity peaks described, and the origin and evolution of the South Atlantic Anomaly. © 2020 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London. All rights reserved.

AB - The importance of the full understanding of the Holocene geomagnetic field spans from human history and archaeology, to palaeoclimatic changes and engineering, to geomagnetic field modelling and unravelling of the geomagnetic field characteristics and anomalies. Unfortunately, the dearth of data from large under-covered areas such as oceans, the African and South American continents, and the southern hemisphere (only 4–6% of the global datasets) dramatically limits our knowledge of the temporal and spatial evolution of the geomagnetic field and its application. Here, a review of all data from the African continent is presented in order to encourage and motivate a new generation of palaeomagnetic and archaeomagnetic studies. New data will sharpen the palaeomagnetism as a dating tool, improve our knowledge of local/global geomagnetic features, and will help to finally answer some of the fundamental questions in palaeomagnetism, like the temporal and spatial distribution of the palaeointensity peaks described, and the origin and evolution of the South Atlantic Anomaly. © 2020 The Author(s). Published by The Geological Society of London. All rights reserved.

U2 - 10.1144/SP497-2019-51

DO - 10.1144/SP497-2019-51

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9781786204738

T3 - Geological Society Special Publication

SP - 127

EP - 141

BT - Geomagnetic Field Variations in the Past

A2 - Tema, E.

A2 - Di Chiara, A.

A2 - Herrero-Bervera, E.

PB - Geological Society of London

ER -