Rock-magnetic and archaeomagnetic investigations on archaeological artefacts from Maharashtra, India

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dc.contributor.author Deenadayalan, K.
dc.contributor.author Gawali, P.B.
dc.contributor.author Lakshmi, B.V.
dc.contributor.author Rai, Manish
dc.date.accessioned 2022-05-25T07:43:38Z
dc.date.available 2022-05-25T07:43:38Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.citation Geological Society, London, Special Publications, v. 497, https://doi.org/10.1144/SP497-2019-119 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://library.iigm.res.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456798/126
dc.description.abstract Archaeointensity and rock-magnetic studies were undertaken on 49 baked clay artefacts from four archaeological sites (Ter, Junnar, Nalasopara and Kanheri) in Maharashtra, India. Rock-magnetic properties, including bulk magnetic susceptibility, magnetic remanence and thermomagnetic analysis, indicate the presence of a low-coercivity magnetite in fine (superparamagnetic, single domain) grain-sizes. The ratio of anhysteretic remanent magnetization to saturation isothermal remanent magnetization, the reversible hightemperature susceptibility curves and the 3-axes isothermal remanent magnetization tests also indicate that the artefacts dominantly possess fine-grained magnetic particles, carrying a stable thermoremanent magnetization (TRM). Archaeointensity was estimated using Coe’s modified Thellier method corresponding to the linear behaviour of natural remanent magnetization loss and TRM gained plots, which were evaluated with ThellierTool4.0 software. Cooling rate and anisotropy of the TRM corrections were applied and the corrected intensities were used to calculate a mean archaeointensity value for each one of the four sites. The new archaeointensity values were plotted along the existing Indian archaeointensity values derived only from archaeological artefacts, and were compared with the SHA.DIF.14k and ARCH10k.1 global models’ predictions. The present study aims to improve the overall understanding of Indian geomagnetic field variation in the past by providing new high-quality archaeointensity results. However, still more archaeointensity values are required to develop a reliable secular variation curve for India. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Rock-magnetic en_US
dc.subject Archaeointensity en_US
dc.subject Thermoremanent magnetization en_US
dc.subject TRM en_US
dc.title Rock-magnetic and archaeomagnetic investigations on archaeological artefacts from Maharashtra, India en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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