Archaeomagnetism in the Levant and Mesopotamia reveals the largest
changes in the geomagnetic field
Abstract
Our understanding of geomagnetic field intensity prior to the era of
direct instrumental measurements relies on paleointensity analysis of
rocks and archaeological materials that serve as magnetic recorders.
Only in rare cases absolute paleointensity datasets are continuous over
millennial timescales, in sub-centennial resolution, and directly dated
using radiocarbon. As a result, fundamental properties of the
geomagnetic field, such as its maximal intensity and change rate have
remained a subject of lively discussion. Here, we place firm constraints
on these two quantities using Bayesian modeling of well-dated
archaeomagnetic intensity data from the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia. We
report new data from 23 groups of pottery collected from 18 consecutive
radiocarbon-dated archaeological strata from Tel Megiddo, Israel. In the
Near East, the period of 1700–550 BCE is represented by 84 groups of
archaeological artifacts, 55 of which were dated using radiocarbon or a
direct link to clear historically-dated events, providing unprecedented
sub-century resolution. Moreover, stratigraphic relationships between
samples collected from multi-layered sites enable further refinement of
the data ages. The Bayesian curve shows four geomagnetic spikes between
1050 and 600 BCE, with virtual axial dipole moment (VADM) reaching
values of 155–162 ZAm2 – much higher than any prediction from
geomagnetic field models. Rates of change associated with the four
spikes are ~0.35–0.55 μT/year
(~0.7–1.1 ZAm2/year), at least twice the maximum rate
inferred from direct observations spanning the past 190 years. The
increase from 1750 BCE to 1030 BCE (73 to 161 ZAm2) depicts the
Holocene’s largest change in field intensity.