4.7 Article

Assessment of Magnetic Techniques for Understanding Complex Mixtures of Magnetite and Hematite: The Inuyama Red Chert

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JB019518

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan
  2. Australian Research Council [DP160100805]
  3. European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Program (FP/2007-2013)/ERC [320750]

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This study focuses on the separation and identification of magnetic components in complex magnetite and hematite mixtures. Different methods, such as FORC, PCA, IRM curve decomposition, were used to extract specific information effectively. It is recommended to combine PCA analysis with FORC analysis to identify magnetic components in complex mixtures.
Magnetite and hematite mixtures occur widely in nature. Magnetic unmixing of the signals recorded by these minerals can be important for assessing the origin of their respective paleomagnetic remanences and for extracting geological and paleoenvironmental information. However, unmixing magnetic signals from complex magnetite and hematite mixtures is difficult because of the weak magnetization and high coercivity of hematite. We assess here the relative effectiveness of first-order reversal curve (FORC) and extended FORC-type diagrams, FORC-principal component analysis (PCA), isothermal remanent magnetization (IRM) curve decomposition, and PCA of remanent hysteretic curves for unmixing magnetic components in samples from the magnetically complex Inuyama red chert, Japan. We also further characterize the domain state and coercivity distributions of both magnetite and hematite with FORC-PCA and IRM acquisition analysis in the red chert. We show that IRM curve decomposition can provide valuable component-specific information linked to coercivity, while FORC-PCA enables effective magnetic domain state identification. PCA of remanent hysteretic curves provides useful information about the most significant factors influencing remanence variations and subtle coercivity changes. To identify components in complex magnetite and hematite mixtures, we recommend PCA analysis of remanent hysteretic curves combined with FORC analysis of representative samples to identify domain states and coercivity distributions.

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