|
Archives
Could Earth's Magnetic Pole Shift To Siberia In 50 Years?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Earth's north magnetic pole is drifting away from North
America and toward Siberia at such a clip that Alaska might lose its spectacular
Northern Lights in the next 50 years, scientists said.
Despite accelerated movement over the past century, the possibility that
Earth's modestly fading magnetic filed will collapse is remote. But the shift
could mean
Alaska may no longer see the sky lights knows as auroras, which might then
be more visible in more southerly areas of Siberia and Europe.
The magnetic poles are part of the magnetic field generated by liquid iron
in Earth's core and are different from the geographic poles, the surface points
marking the axis of the planet's rotation.
Scientists have long known that magnetic poles migrate and in rare cases,
swap places. Exactly why this happens is a mystery.
"This may be part of a normal oscillation and it will eventually migrate
back toward Canada," Joseph Stoner, a paleomagnetist at Oregon State University,
said at an American Geophysical Union meeting.
Previous studies have shown that the strength of the Earth's magnetic shield
has decreased 10 percent over the past 150 years. During that same period,
the north magnetic pole wandered about 685 miles out into the Arctic, according
to
a new analysis by Stoner.
The rate of the magnetic pole's movement has increased in the last century
compared to fairly steady movement in the previous four centuries, the
Oregon researchers
said.
At the present rate, the north magnetic pole could swing out of northern
Canada into Siberia. If that happens, Alaska could lose its Northern
Lights, which
occur when charged particles streaming away from the sun interact with
different gases
in Earth's atmosphere.
The north magnetic pole was first discovered in 1831 and when it was
revisited in 1904, explorers found that the pole had moved 31 miles.
For centuries, navigators using compasses had to learn to deal with
the difference between magnetic and geographic north. A compass needle
points
to the north
magnetic pole, not the geographic North Pole. For example, a compass
reading north in
Oregon is about 17 degrees east of geographic north.
In the study, Stoner examined the sediment record from several Arctic
lakes. Since the sediments record the Earth's magnetic field at
the time, scientists
used carbon dating to track changes in the magnetic field.
They found that the north magnetic field shifted significantly
in the last thousand years. It generally migrated between northern
Canada
and Siberia,
but it sometimes
moved in other directions, too.
Archives
|