McNeill, Donald F. and Kislak, Jason I. (2000): Paleomagnetism of carbonate sediments from Hole 1006A, Bahamas Transect, Leg 166

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 166
ODP 166 1006
Identifier:
2001-002890
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.166.129.2000
doi

Creator:
McNeill, Donald F.
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, Comparative Sedimentology Laboratory, Miami, FL, United States
author

Kislak, Jason I.
Ocean Drilling Program, United States
author

Identification:
Paleomagnetism of carbonate sediments from Hole 1006A, Bahamas Transect, Leg 166
2000
In: Swart, Peter K., Eberli, Gregor P., Malone, Mitchell J., Anselmetti, Flavio S., Arai, Kohsaku, Bernet, Karin H., Betzler, Christian, Christensen, Beth A., De Carlo, Eric Heinen, Dejardin, Pascale M., Emmanuel, Laurent, Frank, Tracy D., Haddad, Geoffrey A., Isern, Alexandra R., Katz, Miriam E., Kenter, Jeroen A. M., Kramer, Philip A., Kroon, Dick, McKenzie, Judith A., McNeill, Donald F., Montgomery, Paul, Nagihara, Seiichi, Pirmez, Carlos, Reijmer, John J. G., Sato, Tokiyuki, Schovsbo, Niels H., Williams, Trevor, Wright, James D., Lowe, Ginny (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, scientific results, Bahamas Transect; covering Leg 166 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution, San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Balboa Harbor, Panama, sites 1003-1009, 17 February-10 April 1996
Texas A & M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
166
123-127
Paleomagnetic analyses from discrete samples of carbonate sediment from Hole 1006A were completed to assess the nature of magnetic remanence and to evaluate the use of directional data for a magnetic reversal stratigraphy. Magnetic remanence in these carbonates was moderate to weak but was stable enough to reliably identify polarity in 26.7% of the samples. The remaining 73.3% samples were judged either too weak or unstable, or else they exhibited a very steep inclination interpreted to be the result of some type of drilling overprint. Thus, magnetic polarity data from Hole 1006A should be used with caution. The nature of magnetic remanence and some reconnaissance acquisition tests suggest that single-domain magnetite (with some possible alteration to maghemite) is the dominant source of the remanent magnetization.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:24.2359
West:-79.2733East: -79.2733
South:24.2359

Stratigraphy; alternating field demagnetization; Atlantic Ocean; carbonate sediments; Caribbean Sea; Cenozoic; demagnetization; isothermal remanent magnetization; Leg 166; magnetic susceptibility; magnetization; magnetostratigraphy; marine sediments; mineral composition; natural remanent magnetization; North Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1006; paleomagnetism; remanent magnetization; reversals; sediments;

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