Earthchanges intensifying: Is planet’s magnetic North Pole migration accelerating?

Magnetic pole migration
June 3, 2013 EARTHThe discovery by NASA rover Curiosity of evidence that water once flowed on Mars – the most Earth-like planet in the solar system – should intensify interest in what the future could hold for mankind. The only thing stopping Earth having a lifeless environment like Mars is the magnetic field that shields us from deadly solar radiation and helps some animals migrate, and it may be a lot more fragile and febrile than one might think. Scientists say earth’s magnetic field is weakening and could all but disappear in as little as 500 years as a precursor to flipping upside down. It has happened before – the geological record suggests the magnetic field has reversed every 250,000 years, meaning that, with the last event 800,000 years ago, another would seem to be overdue. “Magnetic north has migrated more than 1,500 kilometers over the past century,” said Conall Mac Niocaill, an earth scientist at Oxford University. “In the past 150 years, the strength of the magnetic field has lessened by 10 percent, which could indicate a reversal is on the cards.” While the effects are hard to predict, the consequences may be enormous. The loss of the magnetic field on Mars billions of years ago put paid to life on the planet if there ever was any, scientists say. Mac Niocaill said Mars probably lost its magnetic field 3.5-4.0 billion years ago, based on observations that rocks in the planet’s southern hemisphere have magnetization. The northern half of Mars looks younger because it has fewer impact craters, and has no magnetic structure to speak of, so the field must have shut down before the rocks there were formed, which would have been about 3.8 billion years ago. “With the field dying away, the solar wind was then able to strip the atmosphere away, and you would also have an increase in the cosmic radiation making it to the surface,” he said. “Both of these things would be bad news for any life that might have formed on the surface – either wiping it out, or forcing it to migrate into the interior of the planet.”

Earth’s magnetic field has always restored itself but, as it continues to shift and weaken, it will present challenges – satellites could be more exposed to solar wind and the oil industry uses readings from the field to guide drills. In nature, animals which use the field could be mightily confused – birds, bees, and some fish all use the field for navigation. So do sea turtles whose long lives, which can easily exceed a hundred years, means a single generation could feel the effects. Birds may be able to cope because studies have shown they have back-up systems that rely on stars and landmarks, including roads and power lines, to find their way around. The European Space Agency is taking the issue seriously. In November, it plans to launch three satellites to improve our fairly blurry understanding of the magnetosphere. The project – Swarm – will send two satellites into a 450 kilometer high polar orbit to measure changes in the magnetic field, while a third satellite 530 kilometers high will look at the influence of the sun. Scientists, who have known for some time the magnetic field has a tendency to flip, have made advances in recent years in understanding why and how it happens. The field is generated by convection currents that churn in the molten iron of the planet’s outer core. Other factors, such as ocean currents and magnetic rocks in the earth’s crust also contribute. The Swarm mission will pull all these elements together to improve computer models used to predict how the magnetic field will move and how fast it could weaken. Ciaran Beggan, a geomagnetic specialist at the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh, said studies have also refined our understanding of how the field reverses. They have focused on lava flows. When these cool and form crystals the atoms in iron-rich molten rock align under the influence of the magnetic field, providing a geological memory of the earth’s field. But that memory looks different in various locations around the world, suggesting the reversal could be a chaotic and fairly random process. “Rather than having strong north and south poles, you get lots of poles around the planet. So, a compass would not do you much good,” said Beggan. While the whole process takes 3,000-5,000 years, latest research suggests the descent into a chaotic state could take as little as 500 years, although there are significant holes in scientific understanding. “Although electricity grids and GPS systems would be more vulnerable, we are not really sure how all the complex things that are linked together would react,” Beggan said. –Reuters
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12 Responses to Earthchanges intensifying: Is planet’s magnetic North Pole migration accelerating?

  1. Ariela says:

    SO where will this put America when the poles shift, hmmm.

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  2. John B. says:

    When it goes, it will go all at once. Hang on for a wild ride.

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  3. tonic says:

    ” we are not really sure how all the complex things that are linked together would react,”
    This about sums it up. Rocks can tell us how long it lasts and how often it might occur. But outside of this, and it’s affects on humankind, is anyone’s guess.

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  4. Rosco says:

    Robert Felix has published a book on this subject. His theory is these events act like natural selection causing evolutionary “leaps”. Seems feasible to me.

    How can climate scientusts calim the “science is settled” when such an important component of Earth’s energy balance isn’t understood at all ?

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  5. Marty says:

    The video shows how the north pole has progressed over what appears to be a couple of centuries with an apparent acceleration in the recent couple of decades. If someone has the actual data can you do a curve fit? It seems like the resulting graph of future time and position would appear to yield a pretty shocking picture. Hopefully the rate of the pole movement is not actually increasing more rapidly. Hopefully it is more of linear phenomenon than it visually appears.

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  6. Joe says:

    Doesn’t really matter. The magnetic poles are simply field lines and having nothing to do with the positioning of the continents on the surface of the Earth. During a reversal, the field lines move and the continents stay pretty much where they were (save for the 2-5 cm/year normal drift). Humans were around for the last magnetic reversal 780,000 years ago so I expect we will make it through this one as well.

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  7. If recent observations are to be believed, that 10% may now be 20%.
    Multiple reasons for the deterioration likely exist.

    I have often wondered if the Electro-Magnetic Pulse from underground nuclear testing caused effects on Earth’s magnetic core.
    Perhaps they have a destabilizing effect that can be measured?

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  8. Dr. Larry Witherspoon, Phd. (specializing in tracking the earth's magnetic field for 40 years) says:

    Joe is absolutely wrong. There is a terrible “destabilizing” effect during this long overdue pole shift. The poles will shift within the next 50 years and when they do, there will be a period of 3 days minimum when there will be
    no magnetic field and the earth will be bombarded by intense heat. About half the planet’s population should survive, if we’re lucky. The effect will vary greatly regionally.

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