The paper shows that according to recent research, the earth's magnetic field has shown signs that it is ready to shift.
If this occurs, the magnetic north will point south and the magnetic south will point north and have disasterous effects on Earth. The paper discusses how scientists measure the magnetic field by tracking its history from a gigantic crack in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean that oozes lava. As the lava solidifies into rock, it records the Earth's magnetic polarity at various times. According to these records, the Earth is overdue for another reversal. The paper shows that prior to a magnetic field reversal, the magnetic field typically grows weaker and weaker until it almost disappears. As a result, the poles flip and strong
magnetism starts up again. The paper explains how magnetism levels in ancient pottery indicate that over the past 4,000 years, the magnetic field has weakened by about half. In this century alone, it has decreased by five percent. The paper explores theories put forth by scientists that the Earth's magnetic field could disappear in the next few hundred or thousand years. Table of Contents Abstract Introduction Origin of the Earth's Magnetic Field
Paleomagnetism Field Reversals Theories of Magnetic Pole Reversals Earth's Magnetic Field The Main Field Secondary Field Remanent Magnetization Electromagnetic Dynamo Effect Magnetization of Rocks Curie Point Processes of Magnetization in Rocks Magnetic Anomalies Paleomagnetic Data Morphology of Reversals Field Direction and Field Intensity Field Reversals What Drives Reversals? Core-Mantle Boundary Processes Bibliography