Abstract
This paper is an account of the Bakerian Lecture given to the Royal Society on 15 June 1967. Reversals of the Earth's magnetic field can be studied in the magnetization of lavas and sediments on land, in the magnetization of deep sea cores and in the magnetic pattern on the ocean floor. The lavas give radiometric dates but not a continuous sequence; the cores give continuity, great detail and a resolution as fine as 1000 years; the magnetic pattern gives information all through the Tertiary and connects the spreading of the ocean floor with the radiometric time scale. The dynamo theory of the Earth's magnetic field may be able to account for reversals as an instability in the dynamo, but only models with a finite number of degrees of freedom have been investigated. Spreading of the ocean floor is believed to be associated with convective motions in the upper mantle, although there are difficulties connected with the equality of the oceanic and continental heat flows. There is some evidence for the extinction of radiolaria at times of reversal of the magnetic field; it has been suggested that this is due to the effect of the field on cosmic rays but this appears impossible. If the extinctions are due to the reversals, the mechanism is unknown. Reversely magnetized rocks are more highly oxidized than normally magnetized ones. The cause of this is unknown and is one of the outstanding problems of Earth science.