Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Research Article

Jurassic Monster Polar Shift Confirmed by Sequential Paleopoles From Adria, Promontory of Africa

G. Muttoni

Corresponding Author

E-mail address: giovanni.muttoni1@unimi.it

Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra 'Ardito Desio', Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy

Correspondence to: G. Muttoni,

E-mail address: giovanni.muttoni1@unimi.it

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D.V. Kent

Earth and Planetary Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA

Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Palisades, NY, USA

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First published: 07 March 2019
Citations: 3
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Abstract

Jurassic paleomagnetic data from North America have long been contentious, generating ambiguities in the shape of the global‐composite apparent polar wander path. Here we show from a restudy of two subdivisions of the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation at the classic locality at Norwood on the Colorado Plateau that the derived paleopoles reflect variable overprinting probably in the Cretaceous and are of limited value for apparent polar wander determination. We instead assembled an updated set of Jurassic paleopoles from parauthocthonous Adria, the African promontory, using primary paleomagnetic component directions derived from stratigraphically superposed intervals and corrected for sedimentary inclination error. These paleopoles are found to be in superb agreement with independent igneous paleopoles from the literature across the so‐called Jurassic monster polar shift, which in North American coordinates is a jump of ~30° arc distance from the 190‐ to 160‐Ma stillstand pole at 79.5°N 104.8°E to a 148 ± 3.5‐Ma pole at 60.8°N 200.6°E defined by four Adria sedimentary paleopoles and the published Ithaca, Hinlopenstretet, and Swartsruggens‐Bumbeni igneous paleopoles. The implied high rate of polar motion of ~2.5°/Myr across the monster shift is compatible with maximum theoretical estimates for true polar wander. We include a critique of published Jurassic paleomagnetic data that have been variably used in reference APWPs but that as a result of their low quality muted the real magnitude of the Jurassic monster shift. Finally, we provide paleocontinental reconstructions to describe examples of the bold signature that the monster polar shift left in the distribution of climate‐sensitive sedimentary facies worldwide.