Abstract
Abstract. The agonic line, which represents geomagnetic declinations of 0°, recently crossed the Royal Observatory of Madrid (ROM) in December 2021, causing a shift in declination values from west to east. This event constitutes a notable milestone for this significant observatory, where the first geomagnetic observation series commenced around 1855 in Spain. In this work, taking advantage of the occurrence of this event, a detailed study has been conducted to investigate the historical evolution of the magnetic declination at the ROM to decipher prior occurrences of the agonic line crossing this place. Despite the ROM having hosted the first series of geomagnetic measurements in Spain, the present lack of geomagnetic measurements in this observatory makes it necessary to extend the declination measurements to other observatories distributed throughout the Iberian Peninsula to better define the passage of the agonic line since 1855 up to the present. For epochs prior to 1855, a bibliographic search for declination measurements conducted in the Iberian Peninsula has been carried out, complemented by historical data from the HISTMAG database. As a result, a time-continuous curve of geomagnetic declination is generated from 1590 to 2022 at the ROM coordinates. The declination curve reveals that the agonic line also crossed the ROM 400 years ago (around 1600), passing from western to eastern declination values.
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