Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse

When did the first ice form on Antarctica? Large, stable ice sheets started to appear in the Oligocene, but there may have been earlier, transient Palaeocene glaciations which left only brief traces in the sedimentary record. Correlation of such traces across the New Zealand region requires the accu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lurcock, Pontus Conrad
Other Authors: Wilson, Gary Steven, Gorman, Andrew R.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Otago 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2281
id ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/2281
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive)
op_collection_id ftunivotagoour
language English
topic palaeomagnetism
palaeogene
magnetostratigraphy
glaucony
rock magnetism
magnetic mineralogy
new zealand
spellingShingle palaeomagnetism
palaeogene
magnetostratigraphy
glaucony
rock magnetism
magnetic mineralogy
new zealand
Lurcock, Pontus Conrad
Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
topic_facet palaeomagnetism
palaeogene
magnetostratigraphy
glaucony
rock magnetism
magnetic mineralogy
new zealand
description When did the first ice form on Antarctica? Large, stable ice sheets started to appear in the Oligocene, but there may have been earlier, transient Palaeocene glaciations which left only brief traces in the sedimentary record. Correlation of such traces across the New Zealand region requires the accuracy provided by magnetostratigraphic dating. However, the sediments that may contain these traces have extremely weak magnetizations, high glaucony concentrations, and other characteristics which complicate magnetic measurement. To address these problems, I developed measurement techniques for weakly magnetized samples and wrote a software package called PuffinPlot to process the measurements efficiently. (PuffinPlot is a fully-featured palaeomagnetic data plotting and analysis program also intended for use outside the scope of the thesis.) I also conducted an in-depth rock magnetic study to identify the remanence-bearing minerals and determine the effects of glaucony on magnetic behaviour. The rock magnetic results indicated that the remanence in the glauconitic sediments was carried by single-domain magnetite at extremely low concentrations, and the model I developed for remanence acquisition showed that this magnetite was capable of carrying a stable primary remanence. Using PuffinPlot and the results from the rock magnetic experiments, I conducted palaeomagnetic studies of early Palaeogene sections at the mid-Waipara River in Canterbury, Fairfield Quarry in eastern Otago, and Campbell Island, 700 km south of New Zealand. At each site I also measured the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) to determine variations in palaeocurrent. The wide spacing of the sites allows regional effects to be distinguished from local ones. The sections had several features in common: very weak magnetization, necessitating special measurement and analysis protocols; poor response to alternating-field demagnetization, necessitating thermal demagnetization; and thermal alteration at relatively low temperatures, necessitating great-circle remagnetization analysis to infer primary remanences. At Fairfield Quarry, I sampled a 25-metre composite section; 31 of the 58 sites sampled yielded usable data, all of them with reversed polarity. In conjunction with the known location of the K-Pg boundary within the section, this constrained the entire section to the C29r chron. At the mid-Waipara River, 9 sites (of 21 originally sampled) gave reliable directions, all reversed, constraining a 16-metre continuous section to the C26r chron. At Campbell Island, I sampled two sections in different parts of the island and constructed an integrated stratigraphy from a total of 38 site directions, which expanded the known duration of a major unconformity from around 9.5 Ma to 13.4 Ma. The improved age constraints on the Campbell Island section allowed the unconformity there to be correlated with a change in palaeocurrent at the mid-Waipara River, with a previously reported Palaeocene horizon of ice-rafted debris from eastern New Zealand, and with known fluctuations in oxygen isotopes during the Palaeocene, implying an extensive glaciation. Some of the glauconitic horizons at Fairfield Quarry may also be linked to earlier transient glaciations. Since Antarctica was still attached to Australia and South America during the Palaeocene, these results imply that circum-Antarctic ocean gateways are unnecessary for Antarctic glaciation.
author2 Wilson, Gary Steven
Gorman, Andrew R.
format Thesis
author Lurcock, Pontus Conrad
author_facet Lurcock, Pontus Conrad
author_sort Lurcock, Pontus Conrad
title Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
title_short Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
title_full Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
title_fullStr Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
title_full_unstemmed Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse
title_sort palaeomagnetism of palaeogene strata from southern zealandia: implications for ice in the greenhouse
publisher University of Otago
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2281
long_lat ENVELOPE(169.500,169.500,-52.500,-52.500)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Campbell Island
New Zealand
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Campbell Island
New Zealand
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Ocean
Antarctica
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2281
op_rights All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated.
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spelling ftunivotagoour:oai:ourarchive.otago.ac.nz:10523/2281 2023-05-15T13:52:08+02:00 Palaeomagnetism of Palaeogene strata from southern Zealandia: Implications for ice in the greenhouse Lurcock, Pontus Conrad Wilson, Gary Steven Gorman, Andrew R. 2012-05-25T15:04:18Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2281 en eng University of Otago http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2281 All items in OUR Archive are provided for private study and research purposes and are protected by copyright with all rights reserved unless otherwise indicated. palaeomagnetism palaeogene magnetostratigraphy glaucony rock magnetism magnetic mineralogy new zealand Thesis or Dissertation 2012 ftunivotagoour 2022-05-11T19:15:13Z When did the first ice form on Antarctica? Large, stable ice sheets started to appear in the Oligocene, but there may have been earlier, transient Palaeocene glaciations which left only brief traces in the sedimentary record. Correlation of such traces across the New Zealand region requires the accuracy provided by magnetostratigraphic dating. However, the sediments that may contain these traces have extremely weak magnetizations, high glaucony concentrations, and other characteristics which complicate magnetic measurement. To address these problems, I developed measurement techniques for weakly magnetized samples and wrote a software package called PuffinPlot to process the measurements efficiently. (PuffinPlot is a fully-featured palaeomagnetic data plotting and analysis program also intended for use outside the scope of the thesis.) I also conducted an in-depth rock magnetic study to identify the remanence-bearing minerals and determine the effects of glaucony on magnetic behaviour. The rock magnetic results indicated that the remanence in the glauconitic sediments was carried by single-domain magnetite at extremely low concentrations, and the model I developed for remanence acquisition showed that this magnetite was capable of carrying a stable primary remanence. Using PuffinPlot and the results from the rock magnetic experiments, I conducted palaeomagnetic studies of early Palaeogene sections at the mid-Waipara River in Canterbury, Fairfield Quarry in eastern Otago, and Campbell Island, 700 km south of New Zealand. At each site I also measured the anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) to determine variations in palaeocurrent. The wide spacing of the sites allows regional effects to be distinguished from local ones. The sections had several features in common: very weak magnetization, necessitating special measurement and analysis protocols; poor response to alternating-field demagnetization, necessitating thermal demagnetization; and thermal alteration at relatively low temperatures, necessitating great-circle remagnetization analysis to infer primary remanences. At Fairfield Quarry, I sampled a 25-metre composite section; 31 of the 58 sites sampled yielded usable data, all of them with reversed polarity. In conjunction with the known location of the K-Pg boundary within the section, this constrained the entire section to the C29r chron. At the mid-Waipara River, 9 sites (of 21 originally sampled) gave reliable directions, all reversed, constraining a 16-metre continuous section to the C26r chron. At Campbell Island, I sampled two sections in different parts of the island and constructed an integrated stratigraphy from a total of 38 site directions, which expanded the known duration of a major unconformity from around 9.5 Ma to 13.4 Ma. The improved age constraints on the Campbell Island section allowed the unconformity there to be correlated with a change in palaeocurrent at the mid-Waipara River, with a previously reported Palaeocene horizon of ice-rafted debris from eastern New Zealand, and with known fluctuations in oxygen isotopes during the Palaeocene, implying an extensive glaciation. Some of the glauconitic horizons at Fairfield Quarry may also be linked to earlier transient glaciations. Since Antarctica was still attached to Australia and South America during the Palaeocene, these results imply that circum-Antarctic ocean gateways are unnecessary for Antarctic glaciation. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Antarctica University of Otago: Research Archive (OUR Archive) Antarctic Antarctic Ocean Campbell Island ENVELOPE(169.500,169.500,-52.500,-52.500) New Zealand