G.S. Joju , Anish Kumar Warrier , Marcos A.E. Chaparro , B.S. Mahesh , Freddy Abraham Matthew , S. Anusree , Rahul Mohan
{"title":"Mineral magnetic properties of surface soils from the Broknes and Grovnes Peninsula, Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica","authors":"G.S. Joju , Anish Kumar Warrier , Marcos A.E. Chaparro , B.S. Mahesh , Freddy Abraham Matthew , S. Anusree , Rahul Mohan","doi":"10.1016/j.polar.2023.100968","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p><span>This study presents the mineral magnetic, particle size, and organic content data of surface soils from Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica<span>. The analysis of isothermal remanent magnetization<span> and the high specific magnetic susceptibility values –mean (±S.D.) values of 117.7 (±175.0) × 10</span></span></span><sup>−8</sup>m<sup>3</sup>kg<sup>−1</sup><span> for Broknes Peninsula and of 330.9 (±217.4) × 10</span><sup>−8</sup>m<sup>3</sup>kg<sup>−1</sup><span> for Grovnes Peninsula– indicate high concentrations of low-coercivity magnetic minerals. The magnetic minerals are coarse-grained in the multidomain<span> and pseudo-single domain range, and the significant correlation between some magnetic parameters suggests the dominant control of multidomain grains. The remanent acquisition coercivity H</span></span><sub>1/2</sub><span> shows mean (±S.D.) values of 38.2 (±4.9) for Broknes and 38.3 (±3.7) mT for Grovnes soils suggesting magnetite dominance. The soils lie in the sand and loamy sand<span> textural classes, and the concentration of organic matter is very low. Values of percentage frequency-dependent susceptibility indicate insignificant proportions of superparamagnetic grains, and therefore no significant evidence for pedogenic magnetic minerals was observed in these soils. The magnetic signal of Larsemann Hills soils was primarily terrigenous with no contributions from bacterial magnetite, authigenic greigite and anthropogenic magnetic minerals.</span></span></p></div>","PeriodicalId":20316,"journal":{"name":"Polar Science","volume":"38 ","pages":"Article 100968"},"PeriodicalIF":1.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Polar Science","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S187396522300066X","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"地球科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
This study presents the mineral magnetic, particle size, and organic content data of surface soils from Larsemann Hills, East Antarctica. The analysis of isothermal remanent magnetization and the high specific magnetic susceptibility values –mean (±S.D.) values of 117.7 (±175.0) × 10−8m3kg−1 for Broknes Peninsula and of 330.9 (±217.4) × 10−8m3kg−1 for Grovnes Peninsula– indicate high concentrations of low-coercivity magnetic minerals. The magnetic minerals are coarse-grained in the multidomain and pseudo-single domain range, and the significant correlation between some magnetic parameters suggests the dominant control of multidomain grains. The remanent acquisition coercivity H1/2 shows mean (±S.D.) values of 38.2 (±4.9) for Broknes and 38.3 (±3.7) mT for Grovnes soils suggesting magnetite dominance. The soils lie in the sand and loamy sand textural classes, and the concentration of organic matter is very low. Values of percentage frequency-dependent susceptibility indicate insignificant proportions of superparamagnetic grains, and therefore no significant evidence for pedogenic magnetic minerals was observed in these soils. The magnetic signal of Larsemann Hills soils was primarily terrigenous with no contributions from bacterial magnetite, authigenic greigite and anthropogenic magnetic minerals.
期刊介绍:
Polar Science is an international, peer-reviewed quarterly journal. It is dedicated to publishing original research articles for sciences relating to the polar regions of the Earth and other planets. Polar Science aims to cover 15 disciplines which are listed below; they cover most aspects of physical sciences, geosciences and life sciences, together with engineering and social sciences. Articles should attract the interest of broad polar science communities, and not be limited to the interests of those who work under specific research subjects. Polar Science also has an Open Archive whereby published articles are made freely available from ScienceDirect after an embargo period of 24 months from the date of publication.
- Space and upper atmosphere physics
- Atmospheric science/climatology
- Glaciology
- Oceanography/sea ice studies
- Geology/petrology
- Solid earth geophysics/seismology
- Marine Earth science
- Geomorphology/Cenozoic-Quaternary geology
- Meteoritics
- Terrestrial biology
- Marine biology
- Animal ecology
- Environment
- Polar Engineering
- Humanities and social sciences.