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Geomagnetic Field Effects on Living Systems
Te current chron, called the “Brunhes normal polarity chron,” began about 774,000 years ago (774
ka) (ka is an abbreviation for kilo annum, 1 ka = 103years) (Valet et al., 2019; Simon et al., 2019). Te
immediate prior chron from 2.581 to 0.774 million years (Myr) ago (2.581–0.774 Ma) (Ma is an abbrevia
tion for Mega annum, 1 Ma = 106years) is the “Matuyama reversed polarity chron.” It was named afer
Motonori Matuyama, but at the time when he proposed “the theory of geomagnetic reversal” in 1929
(Matuyama, 1929), like the theory of ground motion and continental movement, it was not accepted at
frst. Subsequently, the chron from 3.58 to 2.581 Ma is the “Gauss normal” (Clague et al., 2006), and the
chron from 5.894 to 3.58 Ma is the “Gilbert reverse” (Hill et al., 2006).
Te typical periods of GMF reversals are as follows: the Gilbert–Gauss reversal, 3.58 Ma (Hill et al.,
2006); the Gauss–Matuyama reversal, 2.581 Ma (Clague et al., 2006); the Matuyama–Brunhes (M–B)
reversal, 774 ka (Valet et al., 2019; Simon et al., 2019). As described above, the rate of reversals in the
GMF has varied widely over time. It is not yet known when and how the GMF reversal will occur, but
the mechanism by which the Earth becomes a magnet has been elucidated by the “dynamo theory (geo
dynamo theory)” (Elsasser, 1950; Bullard and Gellman, 1954). Tis dynamo theory was frst proposed
by a German-born American physicist, Walter M. Elsasser in 1946 (Elsasser, 1950), and is the frst math
ematical model to show that the GMF is generated by the current (~3 × 109 A) induced by the convection
in the Earth’s outer core (Elsasser, 1950). Te dynamo theory was proposed not only by Elsasser but also
by a British geophysicist, Edward Bullard during the mid-1900s (Bullard and Gellman, 1954). Bullard
showed that the movement of fuid in the outer core can generate the GMF (Bullard and Gellman, 1954;
Massey, 1980).
Tere is a dynamo (generator) in the Earth’s outer core (Elsasser, 1950), from which an MF is gener
ated, creating dipoles that cover the entire Earth. In the 1990s, research on the Earth’s dynamo (geody
namo), which had been developed only in theory for a long time, became possible on a large scale due
to advances in computers, and research began to clarify more specifc mechanisms of geomagnetic gen
eration. Te key area was located on the core-mantle boundary (CMB) (Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005).
Moreover, observations by artifcial satellites have revealed that there are magnetic fux patches on
this CMB that are opposite to the normal orientation. Tese are called “reverse magnetic fux patches”
(Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005). Te largest reverse magnetic fux patches extend from the southern tip
of Africa to below the southern tip of South America. As a result of comparison with past observations,
it was found that reverse magnetic fux patches were formed one afer another on the CMB (Glatzmaier
and Olson, 2005). It seems plausible that the reverse magnetic fux patches are formed when the MF lines
are afected by the Coriolis force of the Earth’s rotation, and/or by the MF in the east-west direction
(Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005).
In 1995, the team of Satoshi Kageyama and Tetsuya Sato of National Institute for Fusion Science, Japan
(Kageyama et al., 1995), and the team of Gary A. Glatzmaier of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and
Paul H. Roberts of the University of California, Los Angeles (Glatzmaier and Roberts, 1995), announced
that both teams succeeded in simulating the geodynamo independently. Each team has developed a
program that can simultaneously calculate the temperature, pressure, density, fuid movement, and
even the generated MF in the center of the Earth, and using state-of-the-art supercomputers, they have
succeeded in simulating the geodynamo, which has a dominant dipole MF closer to the real Earth
(Suganuma, 2020). Tese were the frst simulations of the geodynamo, albeit with some simple cal
culations (Suganuma, 2020). Te three-dimensional MF structure simulated by supercomputers was
completely diferent from the GMF structure that had been imagined from the time of Gilbert to the
present day (Suganuma, 2020). As a result of calculations to reproduce hundreds of thousands of years, a
dipole MF was generated, reverse magnetic fux patches were formed on the CMB, and then the MF was
reversed (Glatzmaier and Roberts, 1995; Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005). However, no one can be sure that
these simulations are occurring in the core of the Earth, because all calculations use approximate val
ues (Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005). Te heat convection in the core should be complex and there should
be many small turbulences (Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005). It is impossible to handle this turbulence
three-dimensionally with current supercomputers (Glatzmaier and Olson, 2005). While research on