The magnetic properties of igneous rocks from the ocean floor

The measured magnetic properties of submarine igneous rocks, comprising data from approximately 300 specimens, are summarized. Basaltic rocks dominate the collection numerically, and are distinguished by their high Q (ratio of remanent to induced magnetic intensities). Limited numbers of altered samples indicate that spilitization, chloritization, and serpentinization can drastically reduce the intensity of magnetization. The available thermomagnetic data suggest that low Curie points may be typical of quenched basalts. The limited range of submarine igneous rock types examined, and the strong bias towards quenched samples necessitates a supplement to this summary in the form of a discussion of studies of magnetic properties from selected igneous rocks outcropping above sea level. In these studies, serpentinization of ultrabasic rocks has been observed in one case to increase the intensity of magnetization; chloritization and spilitization are confirmed as being magnetically destructive; maghaemitization may have destructive effects; titanomagnetite oxidation variation dominates in magnetic change of basaltic lavas (and some corresponding chemical changes are likely to occur); basaltic intrusives have a much more limited titanomagnetic oxidation range than is generally observed in lavas; and spontaneous demagnetization with time probably exists, at least in basalts. New data are presented. These include the magnetic properties of harzburgites dredged from the Macquarie Ridge, and eight pillow basalts from the South Pacific and Scotia Sea. The former suggest that harzburgite is capable of creating strong magnetic anomalies. Samples for the latter study were sufficiently large for study of the variation of magnetic and petrological properties with depth beneath the cooling surface. Systematic texturual changes from glassy exterior, through a variolitic zone to aphanitic interior characterize the silicates in most samples. Chloritization is present in some aphanitic parts. Serpentinization is present in some aphanitic zones and also next to joints. The opaque minerals were studied in detail in one pillow. The titanomagnetites are all fine and of low oxidation state. Very fine sulphides are common. The intensity of magnetization and susceptibility variation are closely related to the changes in titanomagnetite grain size. Although optically undetectable in the titanomagnetites, a zone of slightly higher oxidation is inferred to exist towards the centre of the pillow by the presence of higher Curie points and magnetic stability, and lower sulphide content. New data are also presented from traverses of Icelandic lavas and dykes, and from spilites of St Thomas, Virgin Islands. It is concluded that the submarine basalt magnetic properties which have so far been determined are largely a function of quenching, in contrast with the data from lavas outcropping above sea level which have generally experienced longer cooling periods, and which therefore include a greater range of titanomagnetite grain size and oxidation states. The quenching process can apparently proceed faster than the oxidizing process in basalts. Magnetic properties of the surface of submarine basalts are therefore largely a function of cooling history, rather than any upper mantle phenomenon. The new data confirm that deuteric or post-cooling alteration of basalts and ultrabasic rocks can be magnetically destructive: chloritization is always associated with a decreasing intensity of magnetization and Q ratio. Spilitization is similarly destructive. The magnetic effect of serpentinization, however, is not uniquely predictable. The magnetic data for submarine ultrabasic rocks show much variation, but are too limited for further generalization.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyeon–Seon Ahn ◽  
Jaesoo Lim ◽  
Sung Won Kim

The sensitivity of magnetic properties, which characterize the mineralogy, concentration, and grain size distribution of magnetic minerals, to environmental processes may provide useful information on paleoenvironmental changes in estuarine environments. Magnetic property studies of estuaries are less common than other environments and, due to the west coast of South Korea having an abundance of estuaries, it provides a good place to study these processes. In this study, we analyzed a variety of magnetic properties based on magnetic susceptibility, hysteresis parameters, progressive acquisition of isothermal remanent magnetization and first-order reversal curve data from a Holocene muddy sediment core recovered from the Yeongsan Estuary on the west coast of South Korea. We examined diagenetic effects on magnetic properties and tested their availability as proxies of paleoenvironmental change. The presence of generally low magnetic susceptibility, ubiquitous greigite-like authigenic magnetic component, and very fine magnetic particle occurrence suggested that the analyzed sediments had undergone considerable early diagenetic alteration. Electron microscopic observations of magnetic minerals support this suggestion. Our results confirm that the use of initial bulk susceptibility as a stand-alone environmental change proxy is not recommended unless it is supported by additional magnetic analyses. We recognized the existence of ferromagnetic-based variabilities related to something besides the adverse diagenetic effects, and have examined possible relationships with sea-level and major climate changes during the Holocene. The most remarkable finding of this study is the two distinct intervals with high values in magnetic coercivity (Bc), coercivity of remanence (Bcr), and ratio of remanent saturation moment to saturation moment (Mrs/Ms) that were well coincident with the respective abrupt decelerations in the rate of sea-level rise occurred at around 8.2 and 7 thousand years ago. It is then inferred that such condition with abrupt drop in sea-level rise rate would be favorable for the abrupt modification of grain size distribution toward more single-domain-like content. We modestly propose consideration of the Bc, Bcr, and Mrs/Ms variability as a potential indicator for the initiation/occurrence of sea-level stillstand/slowstand or highstand during the Holocence, at least at estuarine environments in and around the studied area.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay Kumar ◽  
Dharamvir Singh Ahlawat ◽  
Amrik Singh ◽  
Arun Kumar ◽  
Ompal Singh

Abstract Applicability of magnetic crystalline nanoparticles particularly in the diagnostic field of health care and magnetic data storage makes them highly important for various technological researches. Novel properties of prepared nanoparticles can be tuned with doping of rare earth metals. In the present research, Yttrium (Y) doped hematite nanocrystalline samples have been prepared at various compositions, Fe2 − 2xY2xO3 (x = 0.00, 0.02, 0.05, 0.08, 0.10) and magnetic properties are seen sensitive with dopants concentration. The variation in grain size from FE-SEM is found well collaborated with the crystallite size and strain determined by XRD measurements. Rietveld refinement of XRD patterns reveals the formation of rhombohedral symmetry with Rˉ3c space group of the samples. The dielectric and magnetic properties show wiggling behaviour with the concentration of doping metal. A shift towards weakly ferromagnetic conduct like behaviour has been confirmed with the doping of Y in hematite crystalline particles.


2001 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-66
Author(s):  
Norman Hamilton ◽  
Carol J. Pudsey

Magnetic properties of bulk sediment samples taken from three cores from the Scotia Sea, Antarctica were determined using a fully-automated variable field translation balance. Fine-grained detrital magnetite is identified as the principal carrier of remanence in these Upper Quaternary sediments which were deposited under the influence of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. Inferred magnetite grain-size is consistent with published bulk grain-size data for these cores. Pseudo-single domain grains characterize Holocene samples, and larger, multi-domain grains occur in glacial samples from two of the cores, whereas samples from the northernmost core site show dominantly multi-domain behaviour.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca L. Caldwell ◽  
◽  
Tao Sun ◽  
Sarah Baumgardner ◽  
Ashley D. Harris
Keyword(s):  

The Holocene ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 479-484
Author(s):  
Daniel P Maxbauer ◽  
Mark D Shapley ◽  
Christoph E Geiss ◽  
Emi Ito

We present two hypotheses regarding the evolution of Holocene climate in the Northern Rocky Mountains that stem from a previously unpublished environmental magnetic record from Jones Lake, Montana. First, we link two distinct intervals of fining magnetic grain size (documented by an increasing ratio of anhysteretic to isothermal remanent magnetization) to the authigenic production of magnetic minerals in Jones Lake bottom waters. We propose that authigenesis in Jones Lake is limited by rates of groundwater recharge and ultimately regional hydroclimate. Second, at ~8.3 ka, magnetic grain size increases sharply, accompanied by a drop in concentration of magnetic minerals, suggesting a rapid termination of magnetic mineral authigenesis that is coeval with widespread effects of the 8.2 ka event in the North Atlantic. This association suggests a hydroclimatic response to the 8.2 ka event in the Northern Rockies that to our knowledge is not well documented. These preliminary hypotheses present compelling new ideas that we hope will both highlight the sensitivity of magnetic properties to record climate variability and attract more work by future research into aridity, hydrochemical response, and climate dynamics in the Northern Rockies.


Nanomaterials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manel Missaoui ◽  
Sandrine Coste ◽  
Maud Barré ◽  
Anthony Rousseau ◽  
Yaovi Gagou ◽  
...  

Exclusive and unprecedented interest was accorded in this paper to the synthesis of BiFeO3 nanopowders by the polyol process. The synthesis protocol was explored and adjusted to control the purity and the grain size of the final product. The optimum parameters were carefully established and an average crystallite size of about 40 nm was obtained. XRD and Mössbauer measurements proved the high purity of the synthesized nanostructurated powders and confirmed the persistence of the rhombohedral R3c symmetry. The first studies on the magnetic properties show a noticeable widening of the hysteresis loop despite the remaining cycloidal magnetic structure, promoting the enhancement of the ferromagnetic order and consequently the magnetoelectric coupling compared to micrometric size powders.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 456-463 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. E. Smith

Structural, mineralogical and textural characteristics of some layered granitic rocks are described. The layers result from the segregation of minerals into bands and lenses of contrasting color and grain size. They were formed near the roof of the pluton prior to final crystallization by flow sorting during episodic shearing generated during intrusion. Comparison of the mineralogy and textures of the layered rocks with those of the main rock types of the pluton shows that the differentiation of the pluton as a whole took place after the formation of the layers by interaction of felsic components concentrated in residual liquids with earlier formed crystals.


1999 ◽  
Vol 577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Q. Chen ◽  
B. M. Ma ◽  
B. Lu ◽  
M. Q. Huang ◽  
D. E. Laughlin

ABSTRACTThe phase transformation and the exchange coupling in (Ndo095Lao005)9.5FebaICOsNb 2BI05 have been investigated. Nanocomposites were obtained by treating amorphous precursors at temperatures ranging from 650TC to 9500C for 10 minutes. The magnetic properties were characterized via the vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM). X-ray diffraction (XRD), thermomagnetic analysis (TMA), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were used to perform phase identification, measure grain size, and analyze phase distribution. The strength of the exchange coupling between the magnetically hard and soft phases in the corresponding nanocomposite was analyzed via the AM-versus-H plot. It was found that the remanence (Br), coercivity (Hci), and maximum energy product (BHmax) obtained were affected by the magnetic phases present as well as the grain size of constituent phases and their distribution. The optimal magnetic performance, BHm, occurred between 700°C to 750°C, where the crystallization has completed without excessive grain growth. TMA and TEM indicated that the system was composed of three phases at this point, Nd2(Fe Co) 14B, ca-Fe, and Fe3B. The exchange coupling interaction among these phases was consistently described via the AM-versus-H plot up to 750°C. The Br, Hci, and BHmax degraded severely when the thermal treatment temperature increased from 750°C. This degradation may be attributed to the grain growth of the main phases, from 45 to 68nm, and the development of precipitates, which grew from 5nm at 750°C to 12nm at 850°C. Moreover, the amount of the precipitates was found to increase with the thermal treatment temperatures. The precipitates, presumably borides, may cause a decrease in the amount of the a-Fe and Fe 3B and result in a redistribution of the Co in the nanocomposites. The increase of the Co content in the Nd 2(Fe Co) 14B may explain the increase of its Curie temperature with the thermal treatment temperatures. In this paper, we examine the impacts of these factors on the magnetic properties of (Ndo 95Lao 05)9 5FebaICosNb2B10.5 nanocomposite.


2010 ◽  
Vol 654-656 ◽  
pp. 1106-1109
Author(s):  
Ya Qiong He ◽  
Chang Hui Mao ◽  
Jian Yang

Nanocrystalline Fe-Co alloy powders, which were prepared by high-energy mechanical milling, were nitrided under the mixing gas of NH3/H2 in the temperature range from 380°C to 510°C. X-ray diffraction (XRD) was used to analyze the grain size and reaction during the processing. The magnetic properties of the nitrided powders were measured by Vibrating Sample Magnetometer (VSM). The results show that with the appearance of Fe4N phase after nitride treatment, and the grain-size of FeCo phase decreases with the increase of nitridation temperature between 380°C to 450°C.The saturation magnetization of nitrided alloy powder treated at 480°C is about 18% higher than that of the initial Fe-Co alloy powder, accompanied by the reduction of the coercivity. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) was used, attempting to further analyze the effect of Fe4N phase on microstructure and magnetic properties of the powder mixtures.


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