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Implications of magnetic secular variation for interpretation of crustal field anomalies

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<p>We usually think of crustal magnetic anomalies as static (barring some major seismic or thermal disruption).  But a significant portion of the crustal magnetic field is caused by the interaction of magnetic minerals with the Earth’s magnetic field.  This induced magnetic effect is dependent on the direction and magnitude of the ambient field.  So, of course, as the Earth’s magnetic field changes over time, the form and magnitude of induced magnetic anomalies will vary as well.  These changes will often be negligible for interpretation when compared with measurement and other interpretational uncertainties.  However, with the reduction of various sources of measurement noise and increased fidelity of interpretation, these temporal anomaly changes may need to be considered.</p><p>In addition to considerations relating to interpretation uncertainty, these temporal anomaly changes, if they are measured in multiple magnetic epochs, can theoretically provide valuable information for use in source inversion.  For example, since crustal magnetic anomalies arise from a combination of induced (dependent the ambient field) and remanent (not dependent on ambient field) magnetic sources, measurements of secular magnetic variation can assist in separating these two sources during inversion.</p><p>We will report modeling of the expected form and magnitude of predicted induced anomaly variations, the possible implications of these variations for data compilation and interpretation, and on the availability of relevant data for measuring them.  Recent research into the use of high-resolution magnetic anomaly maps for airborne magnetic navigation has also brought the issue of changing magnetic fields into focus.  Initial work indicates that changes in induced anomalies could affect navigation accuracy in certain situations.</p>
Title: Implications of magnetic secular variation for interpretation of crustal field anomalies
Description:
<p>We usually think of crustal magnetic anomalies as static (barring some major seismic or thermal disruption).
  But a significant portion of the crustal magnetic field is caused by the interaction of magnetic minerals with the Earth’s magnetic field.
  This induced magnetic effect is dependent on the direction and magnitude of the ambient field.
  So, of course, as the Earth’s magnetic field changes over time, the form and magnitude of induced magnetic anomalies will vary as well.
  These changes will often be negligible for interpretation when compared with measurement and other interpretational uncertainties.
  However, with the reduction of various sources of measurement noise and increased fidelity of interpretation, these temporal anomaly changes may need to be considered.
</p><p>In addition to considerations relating to interpretation uncertainty, these temporal anomaly changes, if they are measured in multiple magnetic epochs, can theoretically provide valuable information for use in source inversion.
 For example, since crustal magnetic anomalies arise from a combination of induced (dependent the ambient field) and remanent (not dependent on ambient field) magnetic sources, measurements of secular magnetic variation can assist in separating these two sources during inversion.
</p><p>We will report modeling of the expected form and magnitude of predicted induced anomaly variations, the possible implications of these variations for data compilation and interpretation, and on the availability of relevant data for measuring them.
 Recent research into the use of high-resolution magnetic anomaly maps for airborne magnetic navigation has also brought the issue of changing magnetic fields into focus.
 Initial work indicates that changes in induced anomalies could affect navigation accuracy in certain situations.
</p>.

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