4.6 Article

A Feasibility Study of Microbialites as Paleomagnetic Recorders

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2021.603805

Keywords

microbialites; stromatolites; paleomagnetism; rock magnetism; paleosecular variation

Funding

  1. Research and Creative Activities Support (RACAS) award from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee [AAD3431]

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Microbialites are layered organosedimentary deposits that can preserve high-resolution magnetic field variations. Studies on modern and ancient microbialites show that their magnetization records are consistent with expected field directions, suggesting a detrital origin for the recorded remanent magnetization, with acquisition timing close to sediment deposition.
Microbialites-layered, organosedimentary deposits-exist in the geologic record and extend back in deep time, including all estimated times of inner core nucleation. Microbialites may preserve magnetic field variations at high-resolution based on their estimated growth rates. Previous studies have shown that microbialites can have a stable magnetization. However, the timing and origin of microbialite magnetization were not well determined, and no study has attempted to evaluate whether actively growing microbialites record the geomagnetic field. Here, we present centimeter-scale magnetization and magnetic property variations within the structure of modern microbialites from Great Salt Lake (GSL), United States, and Laguna Bacalar, Mexico, Pleistocene microbialites from GSL, and a Cambrian microbialite from Mongolia. All samples record field directions close to the expected value. The dominant magnetic carrier has a coercivity of 35-50 mT and unblocking temperatures are consistent with magnetite. A small proportion of additional high coercivity minerals such as hematite are also present, but do not appear to appreciably contribute to the natural remanent magnetization (NRM). Magnetization is broadly consistent along microbialite layers, and directional variations correlate with the internal slope of the layers. These observations suggest that the documented NRM may be primarily detrital in origin and that the timing of magnetization acquisition can be close to that of sediment deposition.

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