Abstract

Hydrostatic pressure effects on magnetic parameters for crustal rock have been poorly investigated yet, while it is important for an understanding of source of long-wavelength magnetic anomaly, which is considered to reside in deep crust. In this study we have conducted the in situ magnetic hysteresis measurements on multidomain (MD) magnetite under high pressure up to 1GPa. With special attention to hydrostatic condition and sample preparation, pressure dependences of its magnetic hysteresis parameters (saturation magnetization, Ms; saturation remanence, Mrs; coercivity, Bc; coercivity of remanence, Bcr) are revealed as follows: (1) Bc monotonically increases with pressure at a rate of +91%/GPa; (2) Ms is constant under high pressure up to 1GPa; (3) Mrs increases with pressure up to 0.5GPa by ∼30% and reaches to saturation above the pressure; (4) Bcr is nearly constant at low pressure, and it increases above ∼0.6GPa; and (5) the changes in ratios Mrs/Ms and Bcr/Bc correlate with each other, resulting in systematic movement on the Day plot. These findings allow us to estimate change in a relaxation time of magnetic remanence carried by MD magnetite as a function of depth in the continental crust. In the model calculation, we consider no effect of plastic deformation on magnetic properties of magnetite, and the relaxation time is calculated using the theoretical thermal gradient. In consequence, the relaxation time monotonously decreases with depth, and primary remanence is considered to be replaced by a viscous remanent magnetization (VRM) over the Brunhes chron. Therefore, it is suggested that MD magnetite in deep crustal rocks can contribute to the source of the anomaly over the continental crust by VRM and induced magnetization.

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