Abstract

High‐resolution paleomagnetic records from two sites near Pringle Falls, Oregon, are compared with similar records from Summer Lake, Oregon, ∼170 km to the southeast: Paoha Island, in Mono Lake, ∼660 km to the southeast and Benton Crossing, in Long Valley, approximately 700 km to the southeast, in east‐central California. The sequences at Pringle Falls contain a distinctive coarse pumice‐lapilli tephra layer which we have dated as 218±10 ka by 40Ar/39Ar step‐heating of plagioclase feldspar. Stratigraphically, this tephra is closely associated with a suite of several other tephra layers that bracket the interval studied paleomagnetically. Each tephra layer is distinguished by the unique chemical composition of its volcanic glass shards. The pumice layer dated at Pringle Falls is correlated with layers at three of the other localities. Using all the tephra layers, we can correlate the lake stratigraphic sequences and associated paleomagnetic records among the four distant localities. Additional age control is obtained from a fifth locality at Tulelake in northern California, where the stratigraphic interval of interest is bracketed between ∼171±43 and approximately 140 ka. Characteristics of the paleomagnetic records indicate virtually identical paleofield variation, particularly the geometry of a normal to normal (N‐N) geomagnetic polarity episode. The observed paleofield behavior resembles the Blake geomagnetic polarity episode, but is significantly older than the generally accepted age of the Blake episode. Either the age of the Blake episode is significantly underestimated, or the polarity episode documented here is older, perhaps the Jamaica episode, or is an as yet unreported episode. A corollary of the latter option is that paleomagnetic polarity episodes of different ages may have similar transition polar paths, a conclusion implying that a common mechanism is involved.

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