Abstract
High-resolution paleomagnetic investigations were performed on Río Valdez outcrop at the Fagnano Lake, central Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, southernmost South America. Our aims were to develop a full-vector paleomagnetic secular variation (PSV) record and establish paleomagnetic chronostratigraphy for the outcrop based on radiocarbon dating and the correlation of the PSV record with other dated PSV records in the region. We detected two distinct anomalous directional intervals at 35,400 and 33,800 cal. years BP and at 41,500 and 39,000 cal. years BP, which could be associated with Mono Lake and Laschamp excursions. Rock magnetic investigations revealed slight changes in concentration, mineralogy, and magnetic grain size along the sedimentary sequence, but the reconstruction of past direction and relative paleointensity variations in the geomagnetic field remained feasible. The record provides new insights into the behavior of the geomagnetic field at high latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere, about which very little is currently known.
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