Abstract

SUMMARY As shown in the literature several times, the calculation of the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) of hematite single crystals using standard linear AMS theory reveals that the calculated minimum principal susceptibility is parallel to the crystallographic c-axis, but is negative, which is however not due to diamagnetism as evidenced by direct measurements of susceptibility along the principal directions. Susceptibility of a few hematite single crystals from Minas Gerais, Brazil, was measured in 320 directions using a special 3-D rotator and the measurements were processed through AMS calculation by means of standard linear theory and through constructing contour diagrams in equal-area projection. In addition, the susceptibility was in detail measured in three perpendicular planes approximately passing through the main crystallographic directions. The crystals show extremely high anisotropy, the susceptibility measured along the basal plane is several hundred times higher than that along the c-axis and the AMS ellipsoids are very oblate. The contour diagrams show relatively simple patterns of directional susceptibilities, similar to those of the second-rank tensor. Fitting tensor to measured hematite grains results in small but negative minimum principal susceptibility. Nevertheless, summation of many oriented grains filters out the non-tensorial parts of the grain susceptibility in multicrystal assemblages, the AMS of which is well represented by a tensor.

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