New 42 Ma cratonic North American paleomagnetic pole from the Yukon underscores another Cordilleran paleomagnetism-geology conundrum (Dataset)

David TA Symons; Philippe Erdmer; Phil JA McCausland;

2003 || Magnetics Information Consortium (MagIC)

Paleomagnetic, rock magnetic, or geomagnetic data found in the MagIC data repository from a paper titled: David TA Symons, Philippe Erdmer, Phil JA McCausland (2003). New 42 Ma cratonic North American paleomagnetic pole from the Yukon underscores another Cordilleran paleomagnetism-geology conundrum. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 40 (10):1321-1334. doi:10.1139/E03-047.

Originally assigned keywords

Corresponding MSL vocabulary keywords

MSL enriched keywords

MSL enriched sub domains
  • analogue modelling of geologic processes
Source http://dx.doi.org/10.7288/V4/MAGIC/19662
Source publisher Magnetics Information Consortium (MagIC)
DOI 10.7288/V4/MAGIC/19662
Authors
  • David TA Symons

  • Philippe Erdmer

  • Phil JA McCausland
Contributors
  • Magnetics Information Consortium (MagIC)
  • Distributor
References
  • Symons, D. T., Erdmer, P., & McCausland, P. J. (2003). New 42 Ma cratonic North American paleomagnetic pole from the Yukon underscores another Cordilleran paleomagnetism-geology conundrum. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 40(10), 1321–1334. https://doi.org/10.1139/e03-047
  • 10.1139/E03-047
  • IsDocumentedBy
Citation Symons, D. T. A., Erdmer, P., & McCausland, P. J. A. (2003). New 42 Ma cratonic North American paleomagnetic pole from the Yukon underscores another Cordilleran paleomagnetism-geology conundrum (Dataset) (Version 1) [Data set]. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences. https://doi.org/10.7288/V4/MAGIC/19662