• Title/Summary/Keyword: natural remnant magnetization

Search Result 2, Processing Time 0.016 seconds

Application of Dates of Terrestrial Magnetism to Archaeological Remains - Centered on a Charcoal Kiln with Side Window at Maegokdong, Ulsan - (고고유적에 대한 고고지자기연대법의 적용 - 울산 매곡동 유적 측구부탄요에 대한 적용사례를 중심으로 -)

  • Sung, Hyong-Mi
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
    • /
    • v.8 no.12
    • /
    • pp.214-221
    • /
    • 2008
  • Terrestrial magnetism has left traces through residues such as fossils of the terrestrial magnetism as time went by. An analysis of archaeological terrestrial magnetism is an estimation of dates of archaeological remains where baked earth is exposed by measuring the change of the past terrestrial magnetism through thermo-remnant magnetization of baked earth. This paper attempts to apply an analysis of the archaeological terrestrial magnetism to archaeological remains using fourteen soil samples extracted from a charcoal kiln with side window located at the Area Ⅰ of Maegokdong. The date of A.D.440${\pm}$15 the analysis of archaeological terrestrial magnetism came up with gives solid evidence, while an archeological chronicle used arrangements of surrounding artifacts because of the absence of remains and assumed uncertainly that a charcoal kiln with side window was from the three kingdom periods. This analysis of archaeological terrestrial magnetism has come to anchor as a main natural scientific analysis because it relatively easily removes pollutants and comes up with highly reliable results owing to its considerably narrow error tolerance of assumed dates.

On an Apparatus of Visualization for Magnetic Reversal and Magnetic Stripes (자기역전 시각화 장치와 지자기띠에 대하여)

  • Ryoo, Chung-Ryul
    • The Journal of the Petrological Society of Korea
    • /
    • v.25 no.1
    • /
    • pp.85-88
    • /
    • 2016
  • The new rocks of the oceanic crust, like basalt, are created in the mid-oceanic ridge, and the magnetic polarities of the rocks are supposed to be oriented as following the Earth's magnetic field. An extensive magnetic survey of total field at sea level reveals mainly unusual north-south magnetic stripes parallel to the axis of the mid-oceanic ridge, especially in the Atlantic Ocean. From this stripes the Earth's magnetic field is considered as repeatedly 'flipped'(the N pole becoming the S pole, and vice versa) and many times over geological time. The discovery of stripes of alternately normal and reversed-magnetized rocks forming the ocean floor has been a key evidence for the sea-floor spreading, continental drift, and plate tectonics. This study introduces a simple apparatus to explain a possible mechanism of the magnetic reversal in the new oceanic crust, which makes a magnetic stripe adjacent to the mid-oceanic ridge. The apparatus shows a bar magnet effect of adjoined stripes to have a special magnetic polarity on the rocks in the center of the mid-oceanic ridge. The new magnetic stripe seems to be generated not only by Earth's magnetic field, but also by neighbored stripes in the mid-oceanic ridge, acting as a bar magnet.