约旦前陶器时代到新石器时代的地球磁场强度

A. Di Chiara, L. Tauxe, T. Levy, M. Najjar, F. Florindo, E. Ben‐Yosef
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引用次数: 3

摘要

地球磁场在过去发生了重大变化,对诸如地球深部过程和生命进化等相关现象产生了影响。它过去行为的精确数据集也提供了一个确定时间的工具。我们展示了来自约旦的新石器时代陶瓷和燧石的数据。我们的研究结果是黎凡特地区最古老的,涵盖了人类历史上的一段重大变化时期。这些数据有助于提高古磁曲线的分辨率,从而提高其作为测年工具和理解过去磁场行为的用途。此外,我们展示了使用燧石材料的潜力,燧石材料是整个旧石器时代和更年轻时期制造工具的最常见原材料,用于考古强度调查。限制过去地球磁场强度的长期变化是理解地球动力学短期过程的基础。这些记录也构成了考古遗址和地质构造的强大而独立的测年工具。在这项研究中,我们提出了11个强有力的考古强度结果,从前陶器到新石器时代的约旦陶器,这些结果基于粘土和燧石(燧石)文物。其中两个结果构成了整个黎凡特、古埃及、土耳其和美索不达米亚最古老的考古强度数据,扩展了全新世的考古磁参考曲线。虚拟轴向偶极矩(VADMs)显示,在公元前7600年左右,黎范特南部的地球磁场很弱(约为现在磁场的三分之二),在公元前7000年左右恢复到比现在的磁场更强,在公元前5200年左右再次逐渐减弱。此外,从烧焦的燧石中获得的成功结果表明,这种非常常见但很少使用的材料在考古磁学研究中具有潜力,特别是在从第一次使用火到发明陶器的史前时期。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The strength of the Earth’s magnetic field from Pre-Pottery to Pottery Neolithic, Jordan
Significance The Earth’s magnetic field has changed significantly in the past with implications for related phenomena, such as deep-Earth processes and evolution of life. Accurate datasets of its past behavior also provide a dating tool. We present data from Neolithic ceramics and flint from Jordan. Our results are among the oldest in the Levant, covering a period of major changes in human history. The data help in refining the resolution of the archaeomagnetic curve, in turn enhancing its use as a dating tool and for understanding past field behavior. Moreover, we demonstrate the potential for the use of flint material, the most common raw material for the manufacturing of tools in the entire Paleolithic and younger periods, for archaeointensity investigations. Constraining secular variation of the Earth’s magnetic field strength in the past is fundamental to understanding short-term processes of the geodynamo. Such records also constitute a powerful and independent dating tool for archaeological sites and geological formations. In this study, we present 11 robust archaeointensity results from Pre-Pottery to Pottery Neolithic Jordan that are based on both clay and flint (chert) artifacts. Two of these results constitute the oldest archaeointensity data for the entire Levant, ancient Egypt, Turkey, and Mesopotamia, extending the archaeomagnetic reference curve for the Holocene. Virtual Axial Dipole Moments (VADMs) show that the Earth’s magnetic field in the Southern Levant was weak (about two-thirds the present field) at around 7600 BCE, recovering its strength to greater than the present field around 7000 BCE, and gradually weakening again around 5200 BCE. In addition, successful results obtained from burnt flint demonstrate the potential of this very common, and yet rarely used, material in archaeomagnetic research, in particular for prehistoric periods from the first use of fire to the invention of pottery.
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