Exploring the Magnetic Properties of Specific Grain-Sizes to Understand Marine Depositional Systems: A Case Study from the Eirik Ridge South of Greenland over the Last Glacial Cycle

Disentangling sediment source from sediment transport is a fundamental marine geologic challenge critical to the interpretation of any sedimentary record. The Eirik Ridge, a sediment drift south of Greenland, receives terrigenous sediment primarily from subglacial erosion of south Greenland’s Precam...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Freiberg, Benjamin T.
Other Authors: Joseph, Stoner S., Creveling, Jessica C., Hatfield, Robert G., College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Oregon State University
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/graduate_thesis_or_dissertations/xs55mk24x
Description
Summary:Disentangling sediment source from sediment transport is a fundamental marine geologic challenge critical to the interpretation of any sedimentary record. The Eirik Ridge, a sediment drift south of Greenland, receives terrigenous sediment primarily from subglacial erosion of south Greenland’s Precambrian bedrock and Paleogene volcanics that outcrop in east Greenland and Iceland. These sediments are transported to the Eirik Ridge by the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC), a deep-water system that in general deepens over the drift during interglacial periods and shoals during glacial periods. Prior work on terrestrial sediments show that sources can be discriminated using magnetic and geochemical properties, providing constraints on the origin and as a result glacial processes within the region. Coarse-grained, near-stochiometric magnetites are associated with sediments sourced from Greenland, while fine-grained titanomagnetites are indicative of sediments from Iceland and the Nordic Basalt Province (NBP) with the magnetic properties of the silt fraction distinct between the two sources. To explore this further and the differences between bulk and grain-size specific magnetic properties, samples were taken from two sites drilled on the Eirik Ridge during Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 303. Site U1305 (3,459 meters water depth (mwd)) contains expanded sediment sections when the DWBC is in a deep-interglacial mode, while Site U1306 (2,273 mwd) captures expanded sediments sections when the DWBC is shoaled, a dominantly glacial configuration. Chronology for both cores were updated using previously published radiocarbon dates, oxygen isotope records, and relative geomagnetic paleointensity. Both cores were sampled at ~1 kyr resolution over the last ~150 kyrs. Bulk sediment samples were separated into clay, three silt-size fractions, and a sand fraction to characterize the variability in sediment texture and their magnetic properties. Magnetic properties at both sites are strongly particle size ...