A hiatus in early Quaternary sediments documented in the magnetostratigraphic record of "Meteor" core 13519 from the eastern equatorial Atlantic

Abstract

The sediments of a 10.67 m long piston core recovered from the Sierra Leone Rise ("Meteor" Core 13519) have been analysed for their paleomagnetic properties. Using detailed demagnetization techniques, the geomagnetic Brunhes/Matuyama boundary could be identified between 9.81 and 9.89 m sub-bottom. This is in excellent agreement with the oxygen isotope stratigraphy by SARNTHEIN et al., this volume. Down to this level, therefore, the average apparent accumulation rate amounts to 13.5 m/m.y. assuming an age of 0.73 m.y. for the reversal boundary (BERGGREN et al. 1983). A second transition in magnetization polarity was recognized between 10.51 and 10.54 m sub-bottom. According to its magnetic signature it was tentatively correlated to the beginning of the Jaramillo event (0.98 m.y.). This would imply that in the lowermost part of the core the apparent accumulation rate decreases to less than 20% of that found in the upper sequences. However, as obviously only a small portion of the Jaramillo event is recorded in the sediment column, a more plausible solution is to keep the overall sedimentation rate about constant by introducing a hiatus of some 2路105 years shortly after the lower Jaramillo/Matuyama reversal boundary. Alternative interpretations are also discussed

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