How much precision would you expect for a previously-determined magnetic field strength (on the order of 1 gauss, not very big)?
Even the direction is iffy: where I grew up in northern Minnesota, the maps said "declination uncertain" due to the iron ore deposits.
The rotational period of the Earth is reasonably well determined and constant, but the generation of its magnetic field is a complicated process, with lots of junk in between the iron core and the surface.
Fluctuations in the magnetosphere (external to the Earth, at 10 to 100 times the Earth's radius) due to Solar effects can cause short-term fluctuations in that region up to 10%, so there will be fluctuations even at the surface.
NOAA states: "Earth's magnetic field intensity is roughly between 25,000 - 65,000 nT (0.25 - 0.65 gauss)".
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/products/geomagnetism-frequently-asked-questionsYou would do better to use a AA Duracell as a voltage reference and a cheap carbon resistor to make your current.Back to basics: physics defines current in terms of the force per meter between two infinitely-long wires carrying the same current.
In engineering, it is important to have repeatable standards that are very close to the physical definition, agreed to international bodies:
At present, the Volt is defined by a "cryogenic Josephson Junction", related to a frequency defined in terms of the second.
(Microwave frequencies can be measured to incredible accuracy against the cesium-beam standard, roughly good to 10
-10.)
Also, the Ohm (ratio of volt/ampere) is now (since 1990) defined by the "quantum Hall effect", using an internationally agreed value for the "Klaus von Klitzing constant" R
(K-90) = 25812.807 Ω.
(I leave the meaning of that to you youngsters. When I was a lad, the ohm was defined in terms of several resistors kept at the NBS before it became NIST.)
If you want something more portable than these lab systems, try using any of the good voltage reference ICs and a good precision wirewound or metal foil resistor, calibrated at the factory.
In the back room at Fluke, etc., they have these expensive lab systems for primary calibration.
edit: emphasis added