Importance of Hematite Self-Reversal in Al-Rich Soils Magnetostratigraphy: Revisiting the Damei Red Soil Sequence in the Bose Basin, Southern China
Авторы: Liu C., Qin H., Ferré E. et al
2022 г.
JGR Solid Earth
Understanding the acquisition of chemical remagnetization that commonly takes place in sedimentary red beds is crucial not only to assess the stability of primary chemical remanent magnetization (CRM) but also to evaluate the impact of diagenesis on the paleomagnetic record. The inconsistency between the magnetostratigraphy and the 0.803 Ma age of tektites within the upper vermiculated unit of a red soil
sequence (Damei) in southern China strongly suggests pervasive remagnetization. This remagnetization has
previously been interpreted as a CRM lock-in. However, our recent study suggests that the upper soil units of
this section above the tektite-bearing layer have experienced milder weathering than the underlying layer. It
seems that CRM lock-in has not completely overprinted the primary remanence of this section. To investigate
the exact remagnetization mechanism, the magnetostratigraphy of the Damei sequence was revisited and the
oriented samples were subjected to progressive thermal demagnetization up to 680°C (instead of 585°C in our
previous study) by using a newly designed oven with ultralow magnetic field noise. The new demagnetization
results for vermiculated and red clay samples document a high-temperature (HT) remanence component above
630°C with some above 525°C, and a self-reversal medium temperature (MT) component between 300 and
585°C. The magnetic polarities of most HT components are consistent with the tektite age. The self-reversal
MT component is carried by Al-substituted hematite transformed from Al-substituted maghemite. Self-reversal
likely occurred during the maghemite to hematite transformation process. Additional attention should be paid
when using magnetostratigraphy to date highly weathered aluminum-rich red sediments.
Файл: 1071.pdf
|