1. The directional occurrence of the Levantine geomagnetic field anomaly: New data from Cyprus and abrupt directional changes.
- Author
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Tema, E., Hedley, I., Pavón-Carrasco, F.J., Ferrara, E., Gaber, P., Pilides, D., Toumazou, M., Violaris, Y., Webb, J., and Frankel, D.
- Subjects
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GEOMAGNETISM , *MAGNETIC anomalies , *GEOMAGNETIC variations , *IRON Age , *CURVATURE , *EXTREME value theory - Abstract
• New directional archaeomagnetic data from Cyprus. • The first directional secular variation curve for Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. • Directional curvature changes during the last four millennia. • Insights on the directional occurrence of the Levantine anomaly. We present new insights on the directional occurrence of the Levantine Iron Age Anomaly (LIAA) through the analysis of new and previously published directional archaeomagnetic data from Cyprus and nearby countries. The new directions, obtained from in situ baked clay structures such as small hearths and ovens from five Cypriot archaeological sites, dated from 2000 BCE to 1400 CE, are very well defined and are added to the scant reference dataset for Cyprus. The new records together with literature data from nearby countries are used to investigate the directional variations of the geomagnetic field in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. The first directional palaeosecular variation curve for Middle East is calculated using a critical selection of reference data from Cyprus, Israel, Turkey and Syria. The curve covers the last four millennia and shows several periods characterized by abrupt directional changes. A maximum change in curvature is clearly observed around 900 BCE, characterized by a change rate as high as 13.2° per century. The new curve confirms that during the Levantine Iron Age Anomaly notable for extreme intensity values, the geomagnetic field was characterized by steep inclinations and important directional change too. The maximum curvature is shifted by around one century from the two distinct intensity spikes previously observed in Levant around the 10th and 8th centuries BCE. Other periods of important curvature change are also identified and deserve further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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