Remagnetization of Pre‐Fan Sediments Offshore Sumatra: Alteration Associated With Seismogenic Diagenetic Strengthening
Авторы: Tao Yang, Katerina E. Petronotis, Gary D. Acton
2024 г.
JGR Solid Earth
Increases in temperature and pressure caused by rapid burial of sediments seaward of the Sumatra
subduction zone have been hypothesized to trigger dehydration reactions that diagenetically strengthen
sediments and contribute to the formation of an over‐pressured pre‐décollement, which together facilitate the
occurrence of large shallow earthquakes. We present paleomagnetic, rock magnetic, and electron microscopic
analyses from drill cores collected offshore Sumatra at Site U1480 during IODP Expedition 362 that support this
hypothesis. The older pre‐fan units (Late Cretaceous to early Paleocene) were deposited when Site U1480 was
moving rapidly northward with the Indian plate from a paleolatitude of 50° to 30°S, which would equate to
expected absolute paleomagnetic inclinations of 70°–43°. Most of the older pre‐fan sediments, however, have
shallow observed inclinations (shallower than ±20°), indicating that the sediments were overprinted when Site
U1480 was located near the paleoequator, as it has been since the early Oligocene. Electron microscopic
observations reveal that the pre‐existing detrital magnetite grains have undergone pervasive dissolution and
alteration by hydrothermal fluids. The diagenesis observed is consistent with mineral dehydration, possibly
driven by rapid burial of pelagic sediments by the ∼1250 m thick Nicobar Fan sequence. In addition, the
elevated burial temperature also facilitated the smectite to illite conversion reaction. We hypothesize that
chemical reactions resulted in the formation of fine‐grained magnetite that records a chemical remanent
magnetization overprint. This overprint is consistent with the alteration occurring after burial by the thick
Nicobar Fan sequence sometime in the past few million years.
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