Identifying pedogenic magnetic minerals in loess from China and Siberia using isothermal remanent magnetization acquisition curves

2019 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
pp. 147-167
Author(s):  
Zhijun Le ◽  
Jiasheng Chen ◽  
Xiuming Liu
Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 877
Author(s):  
Danyi Zhou ◽  
Guanghai Shi ◽  
Suzhen Liu ◽  
Bailing Wu

Iron oxides/hydroxides are important magnetic minerals to provide information about changes in the forming environment. However, the magnetic behavior in agate has been rarely investigated. In this study, the magnetic behavior of the Xuanhua-type agate with intense yellow to red colors from the Xuanhua District (China) was investigated by temperature dependence of magnetic susceptibility, hysteresis loop, isothermal remanent magnetization and the analysis of remanent coercivity components from the gradient acquisition plot. Yellow goethite and red hematite can be quantitatively identified by XRD and Raman spectroscopy due to their relatively higher content. Results showed that the red, yellow and orange Xuanhua-type agate had different magnetic behavior, and magnetite existed in the yellow and orange ones. Fluid inclusions in such agate had the homogenization temperature of ~168 °C to 264 °C. All results suggested that the dehydration of goethite to form hematite was the main reason for the high remnant coercivity (above 1000 mT) of hematite in the red agate. The co-existence of magnetite and goethite in the yellow and orange agate reflects the transformation from Fe2+ to Fe3+, indicating the change in the redox property of the environment. Unique patterns mainly formed by hematite and goethite make it a popular gem-material with high research value.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adika Bagaskara ◽  
Christopher Salim ◽  
Muhammad Archie Antareza ◽  
Kevin Dwimanggala Tjiongnotoputera ◽  
Mariyanto Mariyanto

1971 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 361-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. S. Murthy ◽  
M. E. Evans ◽  
D. I. Gough

The Michikamau anorthosite possesses very stable natural remanent magnetization, some of which resists alternating fields up to 1800 Oe. The rock contains two types of opaque grains, fine opaque needles of order 10 × 0.5 μ in the plagioclase felspar, and large equidimensional magnetite particles. Ore microscope studies suggest, but do not establish, that the needles are composed of magnetite. Saturation isothermal remanence and thermal demagnetization studies indicate magnetite as the carrier of remanent magnetization. In order to distinguish the effects of the large grains from those of the needles, mineral separation was used to show that an artificial specimen of essentially pure plagioclase had very similar isothermal remanent magnetization properties to the whole rock. Both indicated magnetite as the magnetic mineral. Thermoremanent properties of the separated mineral fractions indicated magnetite as the dominant magnetic constituent but showed some evidence of laboratory-produced hematite. Theoretical models of grains elongated along [111] and [110] axes are used to show that magnetite needles can exist in stable single-domain configuration in the size and shape ranges of the needles observed in the Michikamau anorthosite. There is thus considerable experimental and theoretical evidence for the conclusion that the stable remanent magnetization of the Michikamau anorthosite is carried by fine single–domain needles of magnetite in the plagioclase felspar.


1994 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 909-914 ◽  
Author(s):  
Biao Wu ◽  
Lianwei Ren ◽  
Charles J. O'Connor ◽  
Jinke Tang ◽  
Jin-Seung Jung ◽  
...  

A new ternary material Co3(SbTe3)2 was prepared by using a rapid precipitation metathesis reaction between the Zintl material K3SbTe3 and CoCl2 in aqueous solution. The dc specific resistivity of this material is in the region for metallic conductors (p = 2.75 × 10-3 Ω-cm). The dc magnetic susceptibility of Co3(SbTe3)2 is reported over a 2.2 K-300 K temperature region, and the material is characterized as a spin glass with a freezing temperature of about 5 K. Magnetization data are also reported as both thermal remanent magnetization and isothermal remanent magnetization as a function of magnetizing field and temperature. When cooled well below the glass freezing temperature, the frozen spin glass has been observed to exhibit photomagnetic effects consistent with a disruption of the spin-glass state caused by uv-radiation.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (11) ◽  
pp. 2401-2405 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. T. A. Symons

The 2.3 km diameter Firesand River complex intrudes Archean volcanics and granites of the Wawa Subprovince in the Superior Province about 8 km east of Wawa, Ontario. It has given differing Middle Proterozoic K–Ar biotite ages of 1018 ± 50 and 1097 Ma. Alternating-field and thermal step demagnetization of specimens from three calcific carbonatite sites, five ferruginous dolomitic carbonatite sites, and one lamprophyre dike site isolated a stable mean direction of 290°, 33 °(α95 = 12°). Isothermal remanent magnetization tests indicate the remanence is held by single-to pseudosingle-domain magnetite and hematite in the carbonatite. The dike remanence is Keweenawan in age, thereby confirming its genetic relationship to the complex, and it gives a positive partial contact test with its host rock, indicating no postintrusive remagnetization. The blocking-temperature spectra indicate that postintrusive uplift has not exceeded about 4 km. The pole position for the complex is 183°E, 27°N (dp = 8°, dm = 13°). This pole lies directly on the well-dated Keweenawan apparent polar wander path, giving an age of 1090 ± 10 Ma, in agreement with the older K–Ar age. It also confirms geologic and aeromagnetic evidence that the complex has not been tectonically tilted since emplacement.


The natural remanent magnetization of rock fragments L2015,3,1 and L2015,3,11 was found to be < 3.5 x 10 -7 and < 40 x 10 -6 G cm 3 g -1 respectively. The former sample, from isothermal remanent magnetization (i.r.m.) measurements, contained very little iron, while the latter sample had a much higher iron content and exhibited i.r.m. characteristics similar to breccia samples from Apollo missions. Susceptibility and i.r.m. measurements have shown that Luna 16 fines contain about four times as much iron as Luna 20 samples and that the light fractions from the density separations contain about twice as much iron as the heavy fraction. Like the Apollo fines, the magnetic behaviour of Luna 16 and 20 fines is dominated by small iron particles, most of which are superparamagnetic and of grain size less than about 13 nm.


Geophysics ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Pinto ◽  
Michael McWilliams

The recovery of core samples is important in petroleum exploration, mineral exploration, and scientific drilling projects; and often complete orientation of the samples (azimuth and plunge) is desirable. Recovered cores are usually not azimuthally oriented because of the costs associated with deployment and operation of downhole orientation tools. Inexpensive paleomagnetic orientation methods have been used with considerable success in the borehole environment (Van der Voo and Watts, 1978; Kodama, 1984; Bleakly et al., 1985a, b; Evans and Mailol, 1986; Layer et al., 1988; McWilliams and Pinto, 1988). In some cases, the technique has been hampered by secondary magnetizations associated with the drillstring and/or coring tool, magnetizations which have partially or completely overprinted the primary and secondary magnetizations used for orientation.


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