MECHANISMS OF REMANENT MAGNETIZATION ACQUISITION IN MARL AND LIMESTONE ALTERNATIONS - CASE-STUDY - UPPER CRETACEOUS (CHRON 31-30), SOPELANA, BASQUE COUNTRY

Citation
Mg. Moreau et al., MECHANISMS OF REMANENT MAGNETIZATION ACQUISITION IN MARL AND LIMESTONE ALTERNATIONS - CASE-STUDY - UPPER CRETACEOUS (CHRON 31-30), SOPELANA, BASQUE COUNTRY, Earth and planetary science letters, 123(1-4), 1994, pp. 15-37
Citations number
58
Categorie Soggetti
Geosciences, Interdisciplinary
ISSN journal
0012821X
Volume
123
Issue
1-4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
15 - 37
Database
ISI
SICI code
0012-821X(1994)123:1-4<15:MORMAI>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
The marl and limestone (M/L) alternations of the Cretaceous/Tertiary s ection in Sopelana in the Basque Country provide a good example of two chemical magnetizations which have been acquired at different times. A detailed study was conducted on a core which contained an unusual pa leomagnetic record in the vicinity of Chron 30 R. The magnetic polarit y switches far more rapidly than expected from the reversal time scale . A 10 cm sampling interval provided, on average, six samples in each M/L couplet that was identified from a curve of carbonate content. The lithostratigraphic NRM pattern is related to the lithology. The inter vals (three to four M/L couplets) along which the contrast in the carb onate content between the limestone beds and the marly layers is low ( < 20%) carry the expected NRM. In contrast, the intervals (two to thre e M/L couplets) along which there is a large carbonate content contras t (> 20%) are characterized, in normal polarity intervals, by the expe cted NRM in the limestone beds and a reverse or blurred NRM in the mar ly layers. The dominant magnetic carrier in this complex zone is diage netic hematite, whereas titanomagnetite was identified below this inte rval. The characteristics of the detrital minerals indicate an erosion of a mature landscape (dominance of weathered ilmenite), probably rel ated to deformation in the Pyrenees. Diagenetic hematite is characteri zed by two families. The first (microgranular size, only tenths of a m icrometre) is present in all the samples and is interpreted as a very early chemical remanent magnetization (CRM) acquired in the oxic zone that probably extended over a few decimetres below the sediment surfac e. The second is restricted to the marly layers of intervals with larg e carbonate content contrasts in the M/L couplets. The grains in this family are larger (very fine, some micrometres in size) and carry a re verse or blurred polarity in a normal polarity zone. It is proposed th at this chemical remagnetization was acquired during the circulation o f oxygenated fluids. The timing for this process is at least 2 m.y. af ter deposition, and more likely > 7 m.y. The second diagenetic family grew at least 90 m below the seafloor, and its distribution shows that the marly layers in intervals with large contrasts in the carbonate c ontent between the marls and the limestones were preferential drains a long which circulation was favoured. This suggests that, although the porosity was still high (40-60%), the diagenetic evolution in the M/L alternations was already being expressed by different physical propert ies. limestone beds and marly layers in intervals with low carbonate c ontent contrasts in the M/L couplets were impermeable to fluid circula tion and the early diagenetic CRM signal has been preserved. In contra st, marls in intervals with a large carbonate content contrast in the M/L couplets were sites of later diagenesis and their early CRM was ov erprinted by another magnetization.