MAGNETOSTRATIGRAPHY OF LOWER PLEISTOCENE BANYOLES PALAEOLAKE CARBONATE SEDIMENTS FROM CATALONIA, NE SPAIN - EVIDENCE FOR RELOCATION OF THE COBB MOUNTAIN SUB-CHRON
R. Lovlie et S. Leroy, MAGNETOSTRATIGRAPHY OF LOWER PLEISTOCENE BANYOLES PALAEOLAKE CARBONATE SEDIMENTS FROM CATALONIA, NE SPAIN - EVIDENCE FOR RELOCATION OF THE COBB MOUNTAIN SUB-CHRON, Quaternary science reviews, 14(5), 1995, pp. 473-485
The Banyoles palaeolake carbonate sediments cored at Bobila Ordis (hol
e BO IV, 52.15 m long) carry a weak natural remanent magnetization (me
an NRM intensity: 0.59 +/- 0.54 mAm(-1)) of reversed magnetic polarity
except for a shea zone of normal polarity close to the top (16.7-14.0
5 m). The NRM is probably carried by magnetite as well as by greigite
(Fe3S4) in some zones. A chronostratigraphic constraint based on the p
resence of rodent teeth belonging to the Lower Pleistocene, coinciding
climatic events, duration of the deposit estimated by cyclostratigrap
hy as well as sedimentation rates, suggests that the short normal pola
rity zone can be correlated to the Cobb Mountain sub-chron (1.19 Ma).
This event is recorded at the Oxygen Isotope Stage 36/35 transition in
marine sediment cores. In core BO IV, the normal polarity zone probab
ly belongs to the end of an interglacial period as indicated by a cool
and humid climate inferred from conifer pollen grains. There is thus
an apparent time difference between the oxygen isotope and pollen sign
al, which is tentatively attributed to a significantly larger post-dep
ositional lag in the acquisition of the remanent magnetization in mari
ne sediments relative to the lacustrine sediment in question. The Cobb
Mountain sub-chron might therefore have actually occurred at the end
of the interglacial isotope stage 35.