학술논문

Relative paleointensity estimates from magnetic anisotropy: Proof of concept.
Document Type
Article
Source
Earth & Planetary Science Letters. Aug2019, Vol. 519, p83-91. 9p.
Subject
*MAGNETIC anisotropy
*REMANENCE
*PROOF of concept
*SEDIMENTARY rocks
*MAGNETIC susceptibility
*RADIOACTIVE fallout
Language
ISSN
0012-821X
Abstract
Relative paleointensity data from sedimentary rocks play an important role to decipher the workings of the geodynamo and to correct for atmospheric cosmogenic radionucleide production, so it is important to understand how sediments acquire remanent magnetizations and to better assess the quality of relative paleointensity data. We present experimental results from sediments deposited in controlled magnetic fields to observe the changes in magnetic anisotropy as a function of applied field strength going from near Earth-like values to almost full saturation. Relative paleointensity values followed a very well defined power law through the entire range of applied field intensities. Magnetic remanence fabrics evolved from oblate with maximum anisotropy axes in the sedimentary plane at low field strengths to prolate with maximum anisotropy axes parallel to the applied field direction at high fields. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility also evolved with field strength, but in a much less coherent manner than anisotropy of magnetic remanence. The experiments used well-characterized, natural sediments containing single domain magnetite, which made it possible to numerically model the data. The model matches the field dependency of both relative paleointensity and magnetic fabric development using a simple assumption that a large proportion (∼80%) of the remanence carriers in the sediments are unable to align with the magnetic field while a small fraction are free to align. Anisotropy of magnetic remanence thus holds promise to improve and assess relative paleointensity estimates and helps improve theoretical treatment of magnetic recording in sediments. • Relative paleointensity data follow a well defined power law vs. field intensity. • Magnetic fabrics evolve from oblate to prolate as field intensity increases. • Only a small proportion (20%) of the remanence carriers are free to align. • Anisotropy of remanence data help assess relative paleointensity estimates. • Anisotropy of remanence data improve theory of magnetic recording in sediment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]