Alaska Science Forum
December 1, 1999Article #1468
by Ned Rozell
This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.
Fairbanks adventurer Roger Siglin has journeyed close to the magnetic north
pole. Near Resolute, in the northern area of Canada now known as Nunavut,
Siglin was 300 miles from the magnetic north pole, the wandering spot on
Earth's surface that attracts compass needles and confounds scientists.
There, his compass needle dipped like a divining rod over water.
"I had to tilt the compass quite a bit to keep the needle from hitting
the face," said Siglin, whose snowmachine odysseys have taken him thousands
of miles in the high Arctic.
The magnetic north pole is now somewhere near Ellef Ringnes Island, approximately
latitude 79 degrees north and longitude 106 degrees west. It won't be there
long. The magnetic pole migrates about 10 kilometers northwest each year.
Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey say the magnetic north pole has
strayed around the north for thousands of years, at one point dropping to
the latitude of Anchorage.
Within Earth is a core that resembles a ball of molten iron and nickel
slightly smaller than the moon. When the core rotates, the sloshing of molten
iron and nickel produces an electric current, and with it a magnetic force.
Ground zero for this force is the elusive spot known as the magnetic north
pole.
In 1600, Sir William Gilbert, a doctor for Queen Elizabeth I, was the first
to suggest Earth behaved like a giant magnet. In 1829, Sir John Ross commanded
an expedition to find the North West Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
He didn't make it. Ice trapped his ship in Canada's Arctic for four years.
Before they were able to retreat to England, Ross's nephew, James Ross,
discovered the magnetic north pole.
When Norwegian Roald Amundsen found the same point during the first successful
trip through the North West Passage 70 years later, magnetic north was 30
miles north of where Ross found it. Amundsen's journey proved that the magnetic
north pole moves. Scientists still aren't sure why it moves, or even why
Earth is similar to a giant bar magnet.
The magnetic north pole isn't the same as the geographic north pole, the
center of Earth's axis. The discrepancy makes topographic maps a bit more
confusing, requiring compass users to adjust for declination, the difference
between geographic (true) north and magnetic north. Because the magnetic
north pole is always changing, USGS updates its maps every five years. Most
handheld GPS units adjust themselves automatically for
declination, which varies wildly with location. In Fairbanks, for example,
magnetic north is about 27 degrees east of true north. New York City is
about 15 degrees west. On the island of Attu in the Aleutians, quirks in
Earth's magnetic field make adjusting a compass for declination unnecessary-true
north there is the same as magnetic north.
The magnetic north pole's constant movement assures the truthfulness of what James Ross wrote upon first discovering its location 168 years ago: "Nature had erected no monument to denote the spot which she had chosen as the center of one of her great and dark powers."