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Rock magnetic signatures in diagenetically altered sediments from the Niger deep‐sea fan
Author(s) -
Dillon Melanie,
Bleil Ulrich
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2004jb003540
Subject(s) - geology , authigenic , diagenesis , anoxic waters , greigite , coercivity , environmental magnetism , geochemistry , mineralogy , magnetite , pyrite , oceanography , paleontology , physics , condensed matter physics
Diagenesis has extensively affected the magnetic mineral inventory of organic‐rich late Quaternary sediments in the Niger deep‐sea fan. Changes in concentration, grain size, and coercivity document modifications of the primary magnetic mineral assemblages at two horizons. The first front, the modern iron redox boundary, is characterized by a drastic decline in magnetic mineral content, coarsening of the grain size spectrum, and reduction in coercivity. Beneath a second front, the transition from the suboxic to the sulfidic anoxic domain, a further but less pronounced decrease in concentration and bulk grain size occurs. Finer grains and higher coercive magnetic constituents substantially increase in the anoxic environment. Low‐ and high‐temperature experiments were performed on bulk sediments and on extracts which have also been examined by X‐ray diffraction. Thermomagnetic analyses proved ferrimagnetic titanomagnetites of terrigenous provenance as the principal primary magnetic mineral components. Their broad range of titanium contents reflects the volcanogenic traits of the Niger River drainage areas. Diagenetic alteration is not only a grain size selective process but also critically depends on titanomagnetite composition. Low‐titanium compounds are less resistant to diagenetic dissolution. Intermediate titanium content titanomagnetite thus persists as the predominant magnetic mineral fraction in the sulfidic anoxic sediments. At the Fe redox boundary, precipitation of authigenic, possibly bacterial, magnetite is documented. The presence of hydrogen sulfide in the pore water suggests a formation of secondary magnetic iron sulfides in the anoxic domain. Grain size–specific data argue for a gradual development of a superparamagnetic and single‐domain iron sulfide phase in this milieu, most likely greigite.

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