Geology of the oceanic crust: Magnetic properties of oceanic rocks

1973 ◽  
Vol 78 (23) ◽  
pp. 5139-5154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J. Fox ◽  
Neil D. Opdyke
1973 ◽  
Vol 78 (23) ◽  
pp. 5155-5172 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J. Fox ◽  
Edward Schreiber ◽  
J. J. Peterson

1983 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 764-775 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick J. C. Ryall ◽  
Marie-Claude Blanchard ◽  
Franco Medioli

Investigation of a seamount 50 km west of Flores, in the Azores, has shown it to be a subsided island. This has been established by the fact that some of the cores recovered by a drill from the seamount at 450 m water depth were composed of subaerial basalt. The presence of Globoratalia truncatulinoides in some cores has dated them at less than 1.8 Ma. The basalt has been dated at 4.8 Ma. These facts give a subsidence rate faster than that of normal oceanic crust. The magnetic properties of the basalts have been measured and the results used in an attempt to calculate the anomaly of the seamount using its bathymetry. No calculated anomaly based on our models resembled the observed anomaly. The observed anomaly shows a linear trend typical of normal oceanic crust.


1973 ◽  
Vol 244 (138) ◽  
pp. 115-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. F. BUTLER ◽  
S. K. BANERJEE

1995 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
pp. 170-182

Ian Gass had two major claims to scientific fame. As a geologist, his early work on the Troodos Complex in Cyprus played an important part in the development of seafloor- spreading theory and the understanding of the nature of the oceanic crust. With Masson- Smith, he was the first to suggest that the ultramafic rocks forming the lower part of the sequence were originally a part of the earth’s mantle and, later, that the complex, including the pillow lavas, represents a section through oceanic crust and its underlying mantle. Troodos became a model for ‘obducted’ oceanic crust and mantle, that is to say slices of oceanic rocks thrust up to higher levels during plate collisions, now preserved at the continental surface, and recognized in many other parts of the globe. His second claim results from his appointment in 1969 as the Foundation Professor of Earth Sciences at the Open University. His department rapidly became a research centre with a first-class international reputation in research as a result of his firm direction and the efforts of the well- equipped staff and research-workers on site. The teaching methods developed, moreover, inspired a veritable host of enthusiastic students. The Open University owes much to Ian, for his early demonstration that it could compete in academic excellence with conventional universities. At the time of his death, Gass had been at the Open University for 23 years and was held in extraordinary reverence by his colleagues and former students.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Hall

An attempt has been made to identify the processes that give rise to a number of depth trends in the magnetization of a 3.1 km vertical section of Icelandic-type oceanic crust and to assess the possibility that similar processes act, and depth trends occur, in typical oceanic crust. The depth trends in the Icelandic section consist of a general increase in saturation and induced magnetization to 2 km crustal depth, below which flow magnetization decreases while dike magnetization remains constant, and of large changes in flow magnetization that occur on a scale of a few hundred metres below 3 km crustal depth.Increase in saturation and induced magnetization with depth in the upper 2 km is thought to be the result of two processes: a decrease in low-temperature oxidation from the original lava surface to 700–800 m crustal depth, thence an increase in hydrothermal alteration with depth. This interpretation is based on oxide petrography and Curie temperatures, which show a weakly defined minimum in the 700–800 m interval, then an increase to ubiquitous "magnetite" values at just below 2 km crustal depth. Although the relationship between magnetic properties and oxide alteration is reasonably well known for the low-temperature oxidation process from laboratory studies and ophiolite and typical ocean-crust analogs, the change in magnetic properties during hydrothermal alteration is not generally known, nor are ophiolite or typical ocean-crust analogs presently available.Decrease in flow saturation and induced magnetization below 2 km is likely to be the result of alteration of magnetite (sensu lato) to nonmagnetic phases, either on a fine scale to hematite (s.l.) between 2 km and 3 km, or by leaching of iron, leaving anatase pseudomorphs after magnetite (s.l.) below 3 km. The relatively low porosity of the dikes is likely to have protected dike magnetite below 2 km from such oxidation and leaching processes.The study confirms that secondary magnetite in several forms is an important magnetic constituent of the flows in the lower part of the section, particularly where decomposition of primary magnetite is widespread. Secondary magnetite occurs as vermiform or bladelike masses, as rims associated with former silicates, or as fresh continuous magnetite occurring either as subhedral grains or as "reconstructed" primary grains in which relics of sphene-replaced ilmenite lamellae grids are seen.In conclusion, the possibility that the near-surface magnetization of typical ocean crust is commonly the minimum value for a layer extending downwards to the onset of an epidote-bearing facies deserves serious consideration, as does the possibility that strong, stable magnetization of secondary origin occurs in flows where dike density becomes significant.


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