
Magnetic properties in an ash flow tuff with continuous grain size variation: A natural reference for magnetic particle granulometry
Author(s) -
Till J. L.,
Jackson M. J.,
Rosenbaum J. G.,
Solheid P.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2011gc003648
Subject(s) - granulometry , geology , grain size , mineralogy , variation (astronomy) , particle size distribution , particle size , geochemistry , flow (mathematics) , particle (ecology) , natural (archaeology) , geomorphology , mechanics , paleontology , physics , oceanography , sediment , astrophysics
The Tiva Canyon Tuff contains dispersed nanoscale Fe‐Ti‐oxide grains with a narrow magnetic grain size distribution, making it an ideal material in which to identify and study grain‐size‐sensitive magnetic behavior in rocks. A detailed magnetic characterization was performed on samples from the basal 5 m of the tuff. The magnetic materials in this basal section consist primarily of (low‐impurity) magnetite in the form of elongated submicron grains exsolved from volcanic glass. Magnetic properties studied include bulk magnetic susceptibility, frequency‐dependent and temperature‐dependent magnetic susceptibility, anhysteretic remanence acquisition, and hysteresis properties. The combined data constitute a distinct magnetic signature at each stratigraphic level in the section corresponding to different grain size distributions. The inferred magnetic domain state changes progressively upward from superparamagnetic grains near the base to particles with pseudo‐single‐domain or metastable single‐domain characteristics near the top of the sampled section. Direct observations of magnetic grain size confirm that distinct transitions in room temperature magnetic susceptibility and remanence probably denote the limits of stable single‐domain behavior in the section. These results provide a unique example of grain‐size‐dependent magnetic properties in noninteracting particle assemblages over three decades of grain size, including close approximations of ideal Stoner‐Wohlfarth assemblages, and may be considered a useful reference for future rock magnetic studies involving grain‐size‐sensitive properties.