Abstract

SUMMARY Samples collected in vertical sections from two recent (1169 AD and 1971 AD) lava flows show significant variations in both the palaeomagnetic vector and the rock magnetic characteristics. The age and the short cooling time of the flows (both are less than 3 m thick) are such that the observed range of palaeomagnetic variation is more than can reasonably be explained by secular variation. The variations in palaeomagnetic and rock magnetic characteristics appear in part to be a response to the relative proportions of two coexisting ferrimagnetic phases, one that displays a primary coarsegrained and Ti-rich composition and a second that has finer-grained, Ti-poor characteristics. The use of AF demagnetization in this study means that the latter phase will have a disproportionate influence on the palaeomagnetic results. It has been suggested elsewhere that in such a magnetic system the Ti-poor phase may represent a CRM formed at some temperature below its final Curie temperature; if so, the results of this study imply that not only does it affect the palaeointensity estimate (which requires a pure TRM) but it appears also to influence the palaeomagnetic direction to an extent that far exceeds the normal secular change that might be expected to occur during delayed acquisition. Such a result has important implications for palaeomagnetic studies that use lavas, both in the selection of a suitable sampling strategy and in the geomagnetic interpretation of palaeomagnetic variation within single flow units.

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