This PBS NOVA documentary is interesting and pertinent to the subject of this thread. The NOVA documentary includes interviews of some of the key geomagnetic specialists that have been involved in the formulation of the current geomagnetic field theory (Including Gubbins and the author of the Stern paper. See the link to the papers above and the NOVA documentary.)
http://www.shift.is/2014/07/nova-documentary-Earth's-coming-magnetic-pole-shift/
The geomagnetic specialists note in the documentary that it appears possible based on the fact that the North pole drift velocity increased by a factor of ten, from 15 km/yr to 55 km/yr starting in the mid 1990s (the abrupt change to north magnetic pole drift velocity was discussed in a previous NOVA documentary which also discussed the discovery of archeomagnetic jerks - sudden changes in the tilt of the geomagnetic field of 10 to 15 degrees - by analyzing ancient fired floor tiles) and the geomagnetic field intensity drop has increased by a factor of ten from a drop of 5% per century which it had been dropping at for the last 200 years or so, to a drop of 5% per decade (this is the finding of the European SWARM satellite analysis which shows that the drop in geomagnetic intensity is over a large region of the earth, concentrated over the North and South America continents) also starting sometime in the 1990's that a geomagnetic excursion appears to be starting which may lead to a geomagnetic reversal.
As noted in the papers quoted above and in this comment, there is evidence of some large unknown forcing function that causes cyclic geomagnetic field changes and which correlate with cyclic climate change and that for the larger forcing events correlate with sudden anomalous volcanic activity.
What caused the past cyclic abrupt changes to the geomagnetic field is possibly what changed in the mid 1990's to cause the sudden abrupt change to the geomagnetic field that is causing the north magnetic drift velocity change and the sudden drop in the geomagnetic field strength.
Earth based forcing functions are expected to be chaotic and hence are not expected to be periodic. There are no Earth based mechanisms that are capable of causing a sudden and rapid cyclic change of convection flow in the Earth's core or a cyclic change to the Earth's geomagnetic field or the Earth's climate.
The authors of this paper note it is anomalous that five volcanoes that have separate magma chambers all erupt within a 100 year period. The authors fail to note that it is also anomalous that there is a geomagnetic excursion (which is a rare and unusual event) that is going on at the same time that this anomalous eruption of five unconnected volcanoes is occurring. i.e. It is logical to ask if there is connection between the two events and hence what could cause both events to occur at the same time.
Simultaneous Volcanic Eruption Paradox which correlates with a geomagnetic excursion.
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2006/2006GL027284.shtml
Geomagnetic excursion captured by multiple volcanoes in a monogenetic field
Five monogenetic volcanoes within the Quaternary Auckland volcanic field are shown to have recorded a virtually identical but anomalous paleomagnetic direction (mean inclination and declination of 61.7° and 351.0°, respectively), consistent with the capture of a geomagnetic excursion. Based on documented rates of change of paleomagnetic field direction during excursions this implies that the volcanoes may have all formed within a period of only 50–100 years or less. These temporally linked volcanoes are widespread throughout the field and appear not to be structurally related. However, the general paradigm for the reawakening of monogenetic fields is that only a single new volcano or group of closely spaced vents is created, typically at intervals of several hundred years or more. Therefore, the results presented show that for any monogenetic field the impact of renewed eruptive activity may be significantly under-estimated, especially for potentially affected population centres and the siting of sensitive facilities.In the late 1990's it was discovered that there is cyclic abrupt climate change based on the analysis of the Greenland ice sheet core. The abrupt climate change events (Heinrich events roughly every 8000 to 10,000 years. The Heinrich events fall on the same series as the 1470 year events which indicates they may have the same forcing function.) correlate with geomagnetic excursion like changes to the geomagnetic field. The lesser climate change event the Dansgaard-Oeschger events (1470 years) correlate with archeomagnetic jerks.
http://geosci.uchicago.edu/~rtp1/BardPapers/responseCourtillotEPSL07.pdf
"Also, we wish to recall that evidence of a correlation between archeomagnetic jerks and cooling events (in a region extending from the eastern North Atlantic to the Middle East) now covers a period of 5 millenia and involves 10 events (see f.i. Figure 1 of Gallet and Genevey, 2007). The climatic record uses a combination of results from Bond et al (2001), history of Swiss glaciers (Holzhauser et al, 2005) and historical accounts reviewed by Le Roy Ladurie (2004). Recent high-resolution paleomagnetic records (e.g. Snowball and Sandgren, 2004; St-Onge et al., 2003) and global geomagnetic field modeling (Korte and Constable, 2006) support the idea that part of the centennial-scale fluctuations in 14C production may have been influenced by previously unmodeled rapid dipole field variations. In any case, the relationship between climate, the Sun and the geomagnetic field could be more complex than previously imagined. And the previous points allow the possibility for some connection between the geomagnetic field and climate over these time scales."
http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~stefan/Publications/Journals/rahmstorf_grl_2003.pdf
Timing of abrupt climate change: A precise clock by Stefan Rahmstorf
Many paleoclimatic data reveal a _1,500 year cyclicity of unknown origin. A crucial question is how stable and regular this cycle is. An analysis of the GISP2 ice core record from Greenland reveals that abrupt climate events appear to be paced by a 1,470-year cycle with a period that is probably stable to within a few percent; with 95% confidence the period is maintained to better than 12% over at least 23 cycles. This highly precise clock points to an origin outside the Earth system; oscillatory modes within the Earth system can be expected to be far more irregular in period."
There have been an interesting set of new papers and research findings concerning the sun including the below linked paper and concerning what is currently happening to the sun which are interesting and may possibly provide an explanation as to past changes to the geomagnetic field what is currently happening to the geomagnetic field. I will start a new thread in astrophysics to present the papers.
http://iopscience.iop.org/1742-6596/440/1/012001/pdf/1742-6596_440_1_012001.pdf
The peculiar solar cycle 24 – where do we stand?