4.6 Article

Detrital remanent magnetization of single-crystal silicates with magnetic inclusions: constraints from deposition experiments

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 224, Issue 3, Pages 2001-2015

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggaa559

Keywords

Magnetic properties; Magnetic mineralogy and petrology; Palaeointensity; Palaeomagnetism; Rock and mineral magnetism

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [41722402, 41774074]
  2. Royal Society-Newton Advanced Fellowship [NAF\R1\201096]
  3. NSFC [42061130214]
  4. Australian Research Council [DP120103952, DP200100765]
  5. NERC [NE/P017266/1, NE/S001018/1]
  6. NSF-NERC program [EAR1827263]
  7. NSF [EAR1547263]
  8. NERC [NE/S001018/1, NE/P017266/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The quasi-linear field-dependence of remanence is crucial for sedimentary relative palaeointensity studies. Magnetic-mineral inclusions within sediments play a significant role in the remanent magnetization and can affect the recording efficiency and inclination shallowing. The size of silicate particles in sediments can impact the inclination shallowing and magnetic moment behavior in Earth-like magnetic fields.
Quasi-linear field-dependence of remanence provides the foundation for sedimentary relative palaeointensity studies that have been widely used to understand past geomagnetic field behaviour and to date sedimentary sequences. Flocculation models are often called upon to explain this field dependence and the lower palaeomagnetic recording efficiency of sediments. Several recent studies have demonstrated that magnetic-mineral inclusions embedded within larger non-magnetic host silicates are abundant in sedimentary records, and that they can potentially provide another simple explanation for the quasi-linear field dependence. In order to understand how magnetic inclusion-rich detrital particles acquire sedimentary remanence, we carried out depositional remanent magnetization (DRM) experiments on controlled magnetic inclusion-bearing silicate particles (10-50 mu m in size) prepared from gabbro and mid-ocean ridge basalt samples. Deposition experiments confirm that the studied large silicate host particles with magnetic mineral inclusions can acquire a DRM with accurate recording of declination. We observe a silicate size-dependent inclination shallowing, whereby larger silicate grains exhibit less inclination shallowing. The studied sized silicate samples do not have distinct populations of spherical or platy particles, so the observed size-dependence inclination shallowing could be explained by a 'rolling ball' model whereby larger silicate particles rotate less after depositional settling. We also observe non-linear field-dependent DRM acquisition in Earth-like magnetic fields with DRM behaviour depending strongly on silicate particle size, which could be explained by variable magnetic moments and silicate sizes. Our results provide direct evidence for a potentially widespread mechanism that could contribute to the observed variable recording efficiency and inclination shallowing of sedimentary remanences.

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