International audienceRecent paleomagnetic studies have shown that important short‐lived intensity fluctuations occurred during the first millennium BCE. However, the knowledge of the spatial and temporal extension of these features is still limited by the scarce availability of robust data. In this study we focus on the study of the intensity decrease that took place in Central Asia during the second half of the 1st millennium BCE after the high intensities that characterized the Levantine Iron Age Anomaly. Since previous archeointensities available for this period and region were obtained without accomplishing modern standards of quality, we present here new archeointensities that are derived from classical Thellier and Thellier experimen...
International audienceWe present new archeomagnetic intensity data from two Late Neolithic archeolog...
International audienceOver the last years new evidences of several short-lived regional maxima of th...
International audienceThis paper presents new paleomagnetic results on Cenozoic rocks from northern ...
International audienceRecent paleomagnetic studies have shown that important short‐lived intensity f...
Recent paleomagnetic studies have shown that important short-lived intensity fluctuations occurred d...
International audienceRecent studies indicate the existence of rapid fluctuations of the geomagnetic...
vEGU21: Gather Online | 19-30 April 2021Recent archeomagnetic studies performed in different regions...
AGU Fall Meeting 2019 in San Francisco, 9 – 13 December 2019Recent archeomagnetic studies provide ne...
Improving geomagnetic field reconstructions clearly poses a high-priority challenge in Earth Science...
Since the mid-19th century, direct measurements of both intensity and direction of the Earth's magne...
International audienceIn Western Eurasia, the first millennium BCE is characterized by the fastest s...
International audienceTwenty new intensity determinations of the ancient geomagnetic field have been...
Thanks to systematic excavations conducted at Tell Mardikh/Ebla (Syria) during more than 40 years, w...
Abstract. As a result of research of residual magnetisation of narrowly dating ceramics (amphoras wi...
International audienceWe present new archeomagnetic intensity data from two Late Neolithic archeolog...
International audienceOver the last years new evidences of several short-lived regional maxima of th...
International audienceThis paper presents new paleomagnetic results on Cenozoic rocks from northern ...
International audienceRecent paleomagnetic studies have shown that important short‐lived intensity f...
Recent paleomagnetic studies have shown that important short-lived intensity fluctuations occurred d...
International audienceRecent studies indicate the existence of rapid fluctuations of the geomagnetic...
vEGU21: Gather Online | 19-30 April 2021Recent archeomagnetic studies performed in different regions...
AGU Fall Meeting 2019 in San Francisco, 9 – 13 December 2019Recent archeomagnetic studies provide ne...
Improving geomagnetic field reconstructions clearly poses a high-priority challenge in Earth Science...
Since the mid-19th century, direct measurements of both intensity and direction of the Earth's magne...
International audienceIn Western Eurasia, the first millennium BCE is characterized by the fastest s...
International audienceTwenty new intensity determinations of the ancient geomagnetic field have been...
Thanks to systematic excavations conducted at Tell Mardikh/Ebla (Syria) during more than 40 years, w...
Abstract. As a result of research of residual magnetisation of narrowly dating ceramics (amphoras wi...
International audienceWe present new archeomagnetic intensity data from two Late Neolithic archeolog...
International audienceOver the last years new evidences of several short-lived regional maxima of th...
International audienceThis paper presents new paleomagnetic results on Cenozoic rocks from northern ...