Abstract

This article presents the first age model built with a combination of paleomagnetic data and radiocarbon dating for the Las Brusquillas 4 archaeological site (Pampas region, Argentina). The sedimentary sequence represents fluvio-lacustrine deposits where faunal remains and lithic artefacts were found in two archaeological layers separated by culturally sterile sediments. Our age model is fundamental to date the human occupation in the area during the Holocene and determine when paleoenvironmental changes occurred at a local scale. Paleomagnetic secular variations (PSV) recorded in 129 cm of this sedimentary sequence were compared to four global geomagnetic field models. Rock magnetic results suggest that the magnetic signal is carried by low-coercivity magnetic minerals like magnetite with an important contribution of antiferromagnetic minerals (hematite-type). The PSV of Las Brusquillas 4 compare well with other natural archives from different regions of Argentina but some differences were found in the declination data, showing the importance of further records from this region to better constrain the secular variation of the geomagnetic field.

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