Abstract

A new investigation of the secular drift of the Earth's pole was made based on nine long series of latitude observations. This led to the following conclusions: 1) During this century, the Earth's pole has been moving approximately along meridian 70 °W at a mean rate of 0.0016″/yr, much less than the 0.0035″/yr derived from the ILS sequence. 2) Relative to the North American Continent, the Ukiah Station located on the western shore of the U.S. shows a local drift of about 6 cm/yr toward north, in good agreement with the result from the new techniques. 3) Relative to the Europe-Asia plate, the whole North American Continent shows a northward drift of about 8 cm/yr. The Mediterranean shows a similar drift of about 6 cm/yr. 4) Three of five ILS stations, Ukiah, Gaithersberg and Carloforte, show significant drifts. Therefore, the Conventional International Origin (CIO), which is defined by the mean latitudes at 1903.0 of the five stations, is far from being fixed on the Earth's surface, and is not suitable as the origin of the Earth Reference System.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call