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    What If Earth's Magnetic Poles Flip?

    The end of the world as we know it could come in any number of ways, depending on who you ask. Some people believe global cataclysm will occur when Earth's magnetic poles reverse. When north goes south, they say, the continents will lurch in one direction or the other, triggering massive earthquakes, rapid climate change and species extinctions.

    The geologic record shows that hundreds of pole reversals have occurred throughout Earth's history; they happen when patches of iron atoms in Earth's liquid outer core become reverse-aligned, like tiny magnets oriented in the opposite direction from those around them. When the reversed patches grow to the point that they dominate the rest of the core, Earth's overall magnetic field flips. The last reversal happened 780,000 years ago during the Stone Age, and indeed there's evidence to suggest the planet may be in the early stages of a pole reversal right now.

    But should we really fear this event? What will actually happen when north-pointing compasses make a 180-degree turn toward Antarctica? Will the continents tear themselves apart, or are we in store for much more mundane changes?

    Weak field

    "The most dramatic changes that occur when the poles reverse is a very large decrease of the total field intensity," said Jean-Pierre Valet, who conducts research on geomagnetic reversals at the Institute of Earth Physics of Paris. [5 Ways the World Will Change Dramatically this Century]

    Earth's magnetic field takes between 1,000 and 10,000 years to reverse, and in the process, it greatly diminishes before it re-aligns. "It's not a sudden flip, but a slow process, during which the field strength becomes weak, very probably the field becomes more complex and might show more than two poles for a while, and then builds up in strength and [aligns] in the opposite direction," said Monika Korte, the scientific director of the Niemegk Geomagnetic Observatory at GFZ Potsdam in Germany.

     

    The scientists say it's the weak in-between phase that would be roughest on Earthlings.

    According to John Tarduno, professor of geophysics at the University of Rochester, a strong magnetic field helps protect Earth from blasts of radiation from the sun. "Coronal mass ejections (CMEs) occasionally occur on the Sun, and sometimes hurtle directly toward Earth," Tarduno said. "Some of the particles associated with CMEs can be blocked by Earth's magnetic field. With a weak field, this shielding is less efficient."

    The charged particles bombarding Earth's atmosphere during solar storms would punch holes in Earth's atmosphere, and this could hurt humans. "Ozone holes, like that over Antarctica (which today are due to an entirely different cause related to man) could form as solar particles interact with the atmosphere in a cascade of chemical reactions. These 'holes' would not be permanent, but might be present on one- to 10-year timescales — arguably important enough to be a concern in terms of skin cancer rates," Tarduno said. [Will Sunscreen Protect You from the Upcoming Solar Flares?]

    Valet agrees that a weak magnetic field could lead to the formation of ozone holes. He wrote a paper last year proposing a direct link between the demise of Neanderthals, our evolutionary cousins, and a significant decrease of the geomagnetic field intensity that occurred exactly at the same period. (That time, the lead-up to a geomagnetic reversal appears to have been "aborted"; the field weakened but didn't end up flipping.)

    Other scientists aren't convinced that there's a connection between pole reversals and species extinctions. "Even if the field becomes very weak, at the Earth's surface we are shielded from radiation by the atmosphere. Similarly as we cannot see or feel the presence of the geomagnetic field now, we most likely would not notice any significant change from a reversal," Korte said.

    Our technology definitely would be in danger, however. Even now, solar storms can damage satellites, cause power outages and interrupt radio communications. "These kinds of negative influences clearly will increase if the magnetic field and thus its shielding function became significantly weaker, e.g. during a reversal, and it will be important to find mitigation strategies," she told Life's Little Mysteries.

    One additional worry is that a weakening and eventual reversal in the field would disorient all those species that rely on geomagnetism for navigation, including bees, salmon, turtles, whales, bacteria and pigeons. There is no scientific consensus on how those creatures would cope.

    Continental shifts?

    Many of the disaster scenarios associated with geomagnetic pole reversals in popular imagination are pure fantasy, the scientists said. There definitely won't be any break-up or shift of the continents.

    The first proof is the geologic record. When the last pole switch happened, "no worldwide shifting of continents or other planet-wide disasters occurred, as geoscientists can testify to from fossil and other records," said Alan Thompson, head of geomagnetism at the British Geological Survey.

    The scientists explained that changes in the Earth's liquid core happen on a completely different distance and timescale than convection in the Earth's mantle (which causes Earth's tectonic plates to shift, moving the continents). The liquid core does indeed touch the bottom of the mantle, but it would take tens of millions of years for changes in the core to propagate up through the mantle and influence the motion of the tectonic plates. In short, "there is no evidence from the geological past and in my opinion also no conceivable method that magnetic reversals couldtrigger Earthquakes," Korte said.

    Sooner or later

    The geomagnetic field is currently weakening, possibly because of a growing patch of reverse-alignment in the liquid core deep beneath Brazil and the South Atlantic. According to Tarduno, the strength of Earth's magnetic field "has been decreasing for at least 160 years at an alarming rate, leading some to speculate that we are heading toward a reversal."

    The reversal might happen, or it might be aborted — Earth is too complex a system for scientists to know which outcome to expect. Either way, the process will drag on over the next few thousand years, giving us time to adjust to the changes. 

    Follow Natalie Wolchover on Twitter @nattyover. Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries, then join us on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • LeonardM  •  San Antonio, United States  •  3 months ago
      A few thousand years?! Well that gives us a little time....
      • Norman 3 months ago
        One of the reasons we are not gifted with knowing our hour of demise is that we can never be sure of when it wil come. Scientist, prophets, would be prophets and lately astronomers have all predicted that the time is nigh.Inlarge part all this does is put a damper on the busy proposition of living, Who can enjoy a night of revelry when the morning is destined to bring a continent sized Asteroid down on our heads, or four horsemen from the acopalyst, to smote us. Heaven forbid all the alignments predicted for December 2012 which will unleash volcanoes, floods and earthqukes and tornadoes upon our heads . We are lucky that none of these seers can give us a date beyond tomorrow or the next hundred thousand years for sure. We would worry are little heads into a heart attack or a stroke for sure.The lesson is get busy living, on the day you die all of the above will occur at that exact same moment.
      • LeonardM 3 months ago
        As you say, God bequeth us with the breath of life, Don't waste it! Live!
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      You'd have to wait ten times as long in the TSA line as they tried to figure out which direction Hell was.
      • jason 3 months ago
        Utah.Always towards Utah.
    • Ea  •  London, United Kingdom  •  3 months ago
      Am I going to have to buy a new compass?
      • Trust Who 3 months ago
        No, just hold your old one opposite of the way you hold it now! (Must be a generation X'er!!)
      • timothy mercurio 3 months ago
        what compasses? wow you guys are in the stone ages! lol did you mean GPS and GPRS for phones and finding your way
      • Bob 3 months ago
        Actually, yes you will. magnetic North is not the same as the geographical North Pole ("true north'). Hey, Timmy, the current generation GPS systems are not designed to compensate for a flip of the magnetic poles. Good thing SOME of us know how to use a compass and a topographical map.
    • Irene P  •  Hudson, United States  •  3 months ago
      Turn this off, have a beer, smoke a joint ,whatever it takes to make you calm. I don't worry about this, I lived through bombs dropping all around us in WW2 in England, I survived a tornado in KY, and hurricanes in Florida, floods in Hawaii back in 1958,Sandstorm in Texas. I believe when it is your time to go there isn't anything you can do about it so just relax.
      • Dataman 3 months ago
        Don't Bogart that joint, Irene.
      • Atilla 3 months ago
        General Patton shared your opinion... he sat outdoors in bombing raids, in a rocking chair, smoking a cigarette and shooting back at the bombers with his pistol. He just dared them to hit him right in the nose, and laughed his maniacal laugh. If he had been an enlisted man, they would have given him a Section 8.
      • UStel 3 months ago
        I saw a tornado pick up an oak tree roots and all that must have been 3 feet in diameter and slam it into a brick building. If you think you are safe in a brick building think again. There is nothing you can do when your time comes.
    • Rosco  •  3 months ago
      Pole reversal tax.........I can see it coming already.
      • Monk 3 months ago
        Al Gore is already on it!!! Plus he is ready to sell you his "Honest Al's Magnetic Credits" for a price to help you reduce your magnetic footprint!
    • GaryL  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  3 months ago
      "the process will drag on over the next few thousand years" Great, this means Congress is already on it!
    • Robert  •  3 months ago
      This article is inaccurate. I clearly saw Neanderthals in Congressional committee meetings the other day on TV.
    • dugola2  •  Herndon, United States  •  3 months ago
      So how would this impact someone with iron balls?
    • Paladin  •  3 months ago
      Maybe it's time we built those huge ark ships like in the movie, "2012". If for nothing else, because they are totally cool.
    • Mr. Anonymous  •  3 months ago
      I am more worried of getting mugged and shot in the malls' parking lots than some asteroid hitting planet Earth or the poles going haywire! I am not worried. Common sense?
    • Carnegie Hill  •  New York, United States  •  3 months ago
      We have the power to prevent this from happening. On the count of three, everyone in China jump at the same time.
    • Robert  •  3 months ago
      If a large CME (coronal mass ejection) occurs, we could have all electrical power and wireless knocked out for some time -- that is perhaps the biggest danger we face in terms of our having become tools of our tools.
    • Chuck  •  3 months ago
      "What If Earth's Magnetic Poles Flip?"
      Well the mountains would be to the east of me instead of the west and I'd probably give bad directions for awhile.
    • rattkiller  •  Charlotte, United States  •  3 months ago
      I thought we were still in the stone age! Look around you at all the idiots you pass on a daily basis and you can see what I mean.
    • Eric  •  Cambridge, United States  •  3 months ago
      Okay, Global warming, pole reversals, supervolcano, mass deaths from disease. This is a fun topic. You can die a millions different ways, let's focus on livng until we don;t live anymore. Deep huh?
    • harvey  •  3 months ago
      As the magnetic reversal occurs, there will be no massive earthquakes etc, all that will happen is some electronics will fail and the earths shield against solar storms will be very negligible, that is where the danger lies.
    • Jerry  •  Pittsford, United States  •  3 months ago
      When the s%&* hits the fan, What will you be doing?
    • Stephen  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  3 months ago
      Plain and simple, one day people will be extinct, its inevitable and you cant stop it so why worry about it. We will blow up from a solar flare or a huge asteroid or more than likely some disease like a plague will wipe us all out. Im not exactly stockpiling gas mask and making a bomb shelter worrying about it.
    • Kobi  •  Austin, United States  •  3 months ago
      My toilet will flush backwards?
    • bostonEddie  •  Boston, United States  •  3 months ago
      "What If Earth's Magnetic Poles Flip?" Every compass wearing boyscout will get lost.
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