4.5 Article

Magnetic Fabrics and Petrography of Rocksalts Reveal Preferred Orientation of Anhydrites within a Halite Matrix

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min12020192

Keywords

anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS); rocksalt microstructures; anhydrite crystal; preferred orientation; Sedom salt wall

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In this study, we investigated the magnetic fabrics and microstructures of diamagnetic rocksalt samples from the Sedom salt wall in the Dead Sea Basin. We used comprehensive analyses to explore the deformation mechanisms and mineral sources of the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS). Our results suggest that the AMS of the rocksalts provides a textural proxy that reflects deformation processes, despite their very low magnetic susceptibility.
We investigate the magnetic fabrics and microstructures of diamagnetic rocksalt samples from the Sedom salt wall (diapir), Dead Sea Basin, as possible strain markers. A comprehensive study of anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS), combined with magnetic, microtextural, geochemical and mineralogical analyses allows us to depict the deformation mechanisms and to reveal the mineral sources of the AMS. The rocksalts are composed of halite as the major mineral phase (>80%) and anhydrite as a minor phase (5-20%), and have an average magnetic susceptibility value of -13.4 +/- 0.7 x 10(-6) SI. Ferromagnetic and paramagnetic minerals make a negligible contribution to the bulk magnetic properties of the samples. The AMS indicates and reveals significant anisotropy with the maximum susceptibility axis (K-1) subparallel to the bedding strike, although the cubic halite crystals are isotropic. Polarizing microscope and SEM images show preferred alignment of needle-like anhydrite crystals parallel to the direction of the K-1 axis. Petrographic investigation of gamma irradiated thin sections reveals the deformation recorded in the microstructures of the rocksalts and points to a dominant contribution by dislocation creep, although both dislocation creep and pressure solution were active deformation mechanisms. We infer that during dislocation creep, the thin bands of anhydrite crystals deform along with the surrounding halite grains. We suggest that although the shape preferred orientation of halite grains is not indicative of finite strain because of resetting by grain boundary migration, the preferred orientation of the anhydrite crystals may be. These results suggest that the AMS of the rocksalts provides a textural proxy that reflects deformation processes of the rocksalts, despite their very low magnetic susceptibility.

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