Early sediment diagenesis on the Blake/Bahama Outer Ridge, North Atlantic Ocean, and its effects on sediment magnetism
Open Access
- 10 April 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 102 (B4) , 7903-7914
- https://doi.org/10.1029/96jb03218
Abstract
Sediment magnetic and geochemical studies of a suite of deep‐sea sediment cores from the Blake/Bahama Outer Ridge (BBOR), North Atlantic Ocean, have identified two current redox boundaries in surficial (Holocene), carbonate‐rich sediments over much of the BBOR. The upper Mn+4/Mn+2 redox boundary is associated with a spike in the concentration of solid‐phase Mn (as MnO2); the lower Fe+3/Fe+2 redox boundary is associated with a spike in the concentration of solid‐phase Fe (as goethite, αFeOOH). Over much of the BBOR, high sediment magnetic intensities occur in surficial, carbonate‐rich sediments associated with these redox boundaries and lower intensities occur in deeper (late Pleistocene) carbonate‐poor sediments. This relationship is opposite to that expected if sediment magnetism simply reflects the clastic (noncarbonate) sediment fraction. The surficial, high sediment magnetic intensities are due primarily to the following two factors: (1) magnetic mineral authigenesis associated with early diagenesis and (2) the presence of abundant <0.1 μm magnetite crystals interpreted to be bacterial magnetosomes. Magnetosomes are almost absent in the late Pleistocene low‐carbonate sediments owing, most likely, to local Pleistocene environmental conditions (high clastic flux, low organic flux) which did not favor their growth. The sediment natural remanent magnetization is strongly correlated with the sediment clastic fraction and is relatively unaffected by early diagenesis and the presence of abundant bacterial magnetite. If this is typical, bacterial magnetite may be more abundant in nature but less important to sediment paleomagnetic records, than previously thought.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Environmental factors as complicating influences in the recovery of quantitative geomagnetic‐field paleointensity estimates from sedimentsGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- Temporal trends of magnetic dissolution in the pelagic realm: Gauging paleoproductivity?Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 1994
- Measurement of the degree of smoothing in sediment paleomagnetic secular variation records: an example from late Quaternary deep-sea sediments of the Bermuda Rise, western North Atlantic OceanEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1994
- Relative geomagnetic intensity of the field during the last 140 kaEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1992
- Evidence for dipolar fields during the Cobb Mountain geomagnetic polarity reversalsNature, 1992
- Carbon fluxes and burial rates over the continental slope and rise off central California with implications for the global carbon cycleGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1992
- Fluctuations in deep western North Atlantic circulation on the Blake Outer Ridge during the last deglaciationPaleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 1991
- Pleistocene fluctuations in the western boundary undercurrent on the Blake Outer RidgePaleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, 1988
- Short polarity intervals within the Matuyama: transitional field records from hydraulic piston cored sediments from the North AtlanticEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1987
- An accurate fusion method for the analysis of rocks and chemically related materials by X‐ray fluorescence spectrometryX-Ray Spectrometry, 1973