The Age of Discovery endures:
A map of palaeomagnetic field drift published by Italian and American researchers in Geophysical Journal International , based on a continuous sequence of lacustrine sediments outcropping in the Apennines reveals that in the 787th millennium BC, Earth boasted an East Magnetic Pole near Latitude 0 Logitude 0 in the Bight of Benin.
It follows that for as long as it took for the magnetsphere's focal point to drift across the Equator, tropical nights were brightened by the light of the Aurora Orientalis shining over the Prime Meridian:
On the far side of the world in the same brief epoch, Homo erectus could marvel at the Aurora Occidentalis illuminating the Pacific around the West Magnetic Pole in the waters north of Tuvalu.