Category Archives: Bram Vaes
Vaes, B.** and van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., submitted, Improved paleomagnetic constraints reveal slow true polar wander around varying equatorial axes during the last 320 Ma, Nature Communications
Vaes, B.**, van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., van de Lagemaat, S.H.A.**, van der Wiel, E.**, Lom, N.*, Advokaat, E.L., Boschman, L.M., Gallo, L.C., Greve, A., Guilmette, C., Li, S., Lippert, P.C., Montheil, L.**, Qayyum, A.*, and Langereis, C.G., 2023, A global apparent polar wander path since 320 Ma calculated from site-level paleomagnetic data, Earth-Science Reviews 245, 104547
Andjić, G.*, Vaes, B.**, van de Lagemaat, S.H.A.**, Boschman, L., Dekkers, M.A., Johnston, S.T., van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., submitted, Paleolatitudinal drift and major rotation of the Wrangellia superterrane in the Mesozoic: a signal of east-Panthalassa plate motion?, Tectonics
Montheil, L.**, Philippon, M., Münch, P., Camps, P., Vaes, B.**, Cornée, J.J., Poidras, T., and van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., 2023, Major rotations in the northeastern Caribbean region reveal large-scale intraplate deformation since the Eocene, Tectonics 42, e2022TC007706
Vaes, B.**, van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., Paridaens, J., submitted, APWP-online.org: a global reference database and open-source tools for calculating apparent polar wander paths and relative paleomagnetic displacements, Tektonika
Traveling Geologist (Canada) – Paleomagnetic fieldwork in Switzerland with Dieke Gerritsen
http://www.travelinggeologist.com/2022/07/paleomagnetic-fieldwork-in-switzerland-with-dieke-gerritsen/
Continue reading →Vaes, B.**, Gallo, L., and van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., 2022, On pole position: causes of dispersion of the paleomagnetic poles behind apparent polar wander paths, Journal of Geophysical Research 127, e2022JB023953
Gerritsen, D***, Vaes, B.**, and van Hinsbergen, D.J.J., 2022, Influence of data filters on the position and precision of paleomagnetic poles: what is the optimal sampling strategy?, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 23, e2021GC010269
Switzerland 2021
In June 2021, our entire team and a few friends from other universities celebrated our first field trip since the start of the Covid ’19 pandemic – a fantastic experience after 15 months of lockdowns. We took two paleomagnetic sampling … Continue reading →