Magnetic properties of iron minerals produced by natural iron- and manganese-reducing groundwater bacteria
Авторы: Alexandra Abrajevitch, Lubov M. Kondratyeva, Evgeniya M. Golubeva et all
2016 г.
Geophys.J.Int.
Understanding the contribution of biogenic magnetic particles into sedimentary assemblages
is a current challenge in palaeomagnetism. It has been demonstrated recently that magnetic
particles produced through biologically controlled mineralization processes, such as magnetosomes from magnetotactic bacteria, contribute to the recording of natural remanent magnetization in marine and lacustrian sediments. Contributions from other, biologically induced,
mineralization types, which are known from multiple laboratory experiments to include magnetic minerals, remain largely unknown. Here, we report magnetic properties of iron minerals
formed by a community of iron- and manganese-reducing bacteria isolated from a natural
groundwater deposit during a 2 yr long incubation experiment. The main iron phases of the
biomineralized mass are lepidocrocite, goethite and magnetite, each of which has environmental significance. Unlike the majority of the previous studies that reported superparamagnetic
grain size, and thus no remanence carrying capacity of biologically induced magnetite, hysteresis and first-order reversal curves measurements in our study have not detected significant
superparamagnetic contribution. The biomineralized mass, instead, contains a mixture of
single-domain to pseudo-single-domain and multidomain magnetite particles that are capable
of carrying a stable chemical remanent magnetization. Isothermal remanent magnetization
acquisition parameters and first-order reversal curves signatures of the biomineralized samples deviate from previously proposed criteria for the distinction of extracellular (biologically
induced) magnetic particles in mixtures. Given its potential significance as a carrier of natural
remanent magnetization, environmental requirements, distribution in nature and the efficiency
in the geomagnetic field recording by biologically induced mineralization need comprehensive
investigation.
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