Study of the magnetic properties of rocks in order to reconstruct the Earth's ancient magnetic field and the former positions of the continents, using traces left by the Earth's magenetic field in igneous rocks before they cool. Palaeomagnetism shows that the Earth's magnetic field has reversed itself the magnetic north pole becoming the magnetic south pole, and vice versa at approximate half-million-year intervals, with shorter reversal periods in between the major spans.
Starting in the 1960s, this known pattern of magnetic reversals was used to demonstrate seafloor spreading or the formation of new ocean crust on either side of mid-oceanic ridges. As new material hardened on either side of a ridge, it would retain the imprint of the magnetic field, furnishing datable proof that material was spreading steadily outward. Palaeomagnetism is also used to demonstrate
continental drift by determining the direction of the magnetic field of dated rocks from different continents.
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