Understanding the Role of Biogenic Magnetite in Geomagnetic
Paleointensity Recording: Insights from Ontong Java Plateau Sediments
Abstract
Marine sediments can preserve continuous paleomagnetic intensity
records. Because different magnetic minerals may acquire remanent
magnetizations differently, compositional variations of magnetic mineral
assemblages in sediments may hinder extraction of reliable relative
paleointensity (RPI) records. To better understand this issue, we
conducted a paleo- and rock magnetic study of a sediment core from the
Ontong Java Plateau in the western equatorial Pacific Ocean. RPI
estimated by normalizing natural remanent magnetization with
anhysteretic remanent magnetization (ARM) decreases downcore with an
inverse correlation with the ratio of ARM susceptibility to saturation
isothermal remanent magnetization. This relationship indicates that the
RPI signal weakens as the proportion of biogenic magnetite increases.
The NRM–ARM demagnetization diagrams we compiled show concave-down
curvature. These observations indicate that the RPI recording efficiency
of the biogenic component is lower than that of the terrigenous
component when we assume that the magnetizations of the high- and
low-coercivity windows are carried dominantly by biogenic and
terrigenous components, respectively. This assumption is supported by
first-order reversal curve measurements, transmission electron
microscope observations, low-temperature measurements, and extraction of
silicate-hosted magnetic inclusions from the sediments. Previous studies
have suggested that the RPI recording efficiency of biogenic magnetite
is higher than that of the terrigenous component, which disagrees with
our results. Different concentrations of silicate-hosted magnetic
inclusions in different sedimentary environments might explain this
contradiction. We concluded that biogenic magnetite contributes to RPI
records with lower efficiency than unprotected terrigenous magnetic
minerals in the studied sediments. Changing biogenic magnetite
proportion distorts ARM-normalized RPI.