Biogenic magnetite, detrital hematite, and relative paleointensity in Quaternary sediments from the Southwest Iberian Margin

J. E.T. Channell, D. A. Hodell, V. Margari, L. C. Skinner, P. C. Tzedakis, M. S. Kesler

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45 Scopus citations

Abstract

Magnetic properties of late Quaternary sediments on the SW Iberian Margin are dominated by bacterial magnetite, observed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), with contributions from detrital titanomagnetite and hematite. Reactive hematite, together with low organic matter concentrations and the lack of sulfate reduction, lead to dissimilatory iron reduction and availability of Fe(II) for abundant magnetotactic bacteria. Magnetite grain-size proxies (κARM/κ and ARM/IRM) and S-ratios (sensitive to hematite) vary on stadial/interstadial timescales, contain orbital power, and mimic planktic δ18O. The detrital/biogenic magnetite ratio and hematite concentration are greater during stadials and glacial isotopic stages, reflecting increased detrital (magnetite) input during times of lowered sea level, coinciding with atmospheric conditions favoring hematitic dust supply. Magnetic susceptibility, on the other hand, has a very different response being sensitive to coarse detrital multidomain (MD) magnetite associated with ice-rafted debris (IRD). High susceptibility and/or magnetic grain-size coarsening, mark Heinrich stadials (HS), particularly HS2, HS3, HS4, HS5, HS6 and HS7, as well as older Heinrich-like detrital layers, indicating the sensitivity of this region to fluctuations in the position of the polar front. Relative paleointensity (RPI) records have well-constrained age models based on planktic δ18O correlation to ice-core chronologies, however, they differ from reference records (e.g. PISO) particularly in the vicinity of glacial maxima, mainly due to inefficient normalization of RPI records in intervals of enhanced hematite input.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)99-109
Number of pages11
JournalEarth and Planetary Science Letters
Volume376
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 5 2013
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Research supported by US National Science Foundation grants OCE-0850413 and EAR-1014506 (to J.C.). We thank K. Huang for laboratory assistance, S. Crowhurst for help with core sampling, and A. Muxworthy for supplying the template for Fig. 10 . We appreciate the editorial comments of Jean Lynch-Stieglitz and Dennis Kent. Data are available at http://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.811826 .

FundersFunder number
National Science FoundationOCE-0850413, EAR-1014506
Natural Environment Research CouncilNE/H009930/1, bosc01001

    Keywords

    • Biogenic magnetite
    • Iberian Margin
    • Magnetic properties
    • Relative paleointensity

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