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Crustal Magnetism, Lamellar Magnetism and Rocks That Remember Suzanne A. McEnroe1, Karl Fabian1, Peter Robinson1, Carmen Gaina1 and Laurie L. Brown2 1811-5209/09/0005-0241$2.50 DOI: 10.2113/gselements.5.4.241 M agnetic anomalies are deviations from an internal planetary magnetic field produced by crustal materials. Crustal anomalies, measured over a wide range of vertical distances, from near-surface to satellites, are caused by magnetic minerals that respond to the changing planetary field. Previously, magnetism of continental crust was described in terms of the bulk ferrimagnetism of crustal minerals, which is mostly due to induced magnetization. The recent discovery of lamellar magnetism, a new interface-based remanence type, has changed our thinking about the contribution of remanent magnetization. Lamellar magnetism may also be an important contributor to deep-seated anomalies in the crust of the Earth and in other planets with highly magnetic crusts, like Mars. Leonhardt and Fabian 2007; Aubert et al. 2008). However, the revolutionary fact of global polarity reversal, only demonstrated with certainty in the early 1960s, led directly to the even more revolutionary modern theory of plate tectonics, which now governs all aspects of the study of Earth history. INDUCED AND REMANENT MAGNETIZATION Rocks carry two types of magnetization: (1) magnetization induced (Mind) by an external magnetic field Keywords : magnetic anomalies, remanent magnetism, lamellar magnetism, and proportional to the rocks’ hematite, ilmenite, crustal magnetism, Mars magnetic susceptibility, χ, and to the BASIC GEOMAGNETISM field, H; and (2) remanent magnetization (Mr), which in igneous rocks is typically locked in Geomagnetism is one of the oldest natural sciences, and during cooling. While the induced magnetization is a response historians consider the book De Magnete, Magneticisque Corporibus, et de Magno Magnete Tellure (On the Magnet and to the present magnetic field, the remanent component Magnetic Bodies, and on That Great Magnet the Earth), published by William Gilbert in 1600, as the first modern scientific treatise. While Gilbert envisaged the Earth as a large magnet, we now know that the geomagnetic field is a direct signal from Earth’s outer core, propagating nearly undistorted to the surface (Merrill et al. 1996). The geomagnetic field has been recorded by magnetic minerals in surface rocks since formation of the solid crust. The mineralmagnetic record of the paleomagnetic field is an archive of the history of magnetic-field generation in the outer core, where liquid iron is convecting at a speed of up to 5 m/h. On Earth, records of magnetic-field variation are preserved in many rock types and throughout time, starting with rocks magnetized nearly 3.7 billion years ago and continuing to today’s sea floor and active volcanoes. What Gilbert found was that the geometry of the geomagnetic field closely resembles that of a magnetized sphere. The predominant dipole component is equivalent to the field of a bar magnet mounted at the Earth’s centre and nearly aligned with the rotation axis (Fig. 1). Magnetic-field intensity decreases from about 60 microteslas (μT) at the poles to ~30 μT at the geomagnetic equator. Paleomagnetic studies around the world indicate that the field geometry has been an axial dipole throughout most of Earth history and that it has reversed its polarity at numerous and irregular intervals through time (Merrill et al. 1996). What exactly happens during a polarity reversal is a special field of research (e.g. 1 Geological Survey of Norway, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway 2 Department of Geoscience, University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA 01103, USA E-mail: [email protected] E lements , V ol . 5, pp. 241–24 6 A B C (A) William Gilbert stated in 1600 that the Earth itself is a large magnet. Although, in fact, the Earth’s magnetic field is created by a dynamo process driven by extremely fast convection (averaging ~1 m/h) of highly conductive liquid iron in the outer core, its geometry at and above the surface closely resembles the field that a dipole at the Earth's centre would generate. (B) Today, the magnetic south pole nearly coincides with the geographic north pole, but the field axis is slightly tilted. The field strength at the geomagnetic poles is twice the strength at the geomagnetic equator. (C) If a remanent magnetization formed 1 billion years ago in the southern hemisphere parallel to a normal field and later was transported by plate motion to the north, it could create a negative remanent anomaly. 241 Figure 1 A ugus t 2009 may have formed a billion years ago in the past, on the other side of the Earth, and been transported and rotated into its current direction by plate motion (Fig.1c). When carrying out a magnetic survey, it is essential to recognize that the total magnetization measured is a vector sum: Mtot = Mind + Mr = χH + Mr Thus, the Koenigsberger ratio (Q = Mr / Mind) is a key characteristic for a correct interpretation of magnetic signals from the crust (Fig. 2). The total magnetization of samples with low Q values (<0.5) is dominated by the induced magnetization (Mind). Their “magnetic anomaly”, which is the deviation between the expected dipolar and the measured field value at that location, will map primarily as a magnetic high (positive) compared to non-magnetic crust. The amplitude of an induced anomaly increases with magnetic mineral content, which makes it valuable for ore exploration. The natural remanent magnetization (NRM) vector, Mr, becomes important for high Q, i.e. values around 2 (Fig. 2), when the direction and intensity of the NRM must be known to model the anomaly. When Q reaches 5, the dominant remanence can lead to large negative anomalies when the NRM vector is at an obtuse angle to the inducing field. When the NRM direction is close to the inducing field, one finds large positive anomalies, with the remanent vector adding to the induced vector. In the following, we will discuss the mineralogical sources for anomalies with high Q values. In quickly cooled continental or oceanic lavas, fine-grained (titano-)magnetite is known to carry a sufficiently strong remanence to produce moderate to high Q values. Much of the continental crust contains coarser magnetite that produces induced anomalies. Yet, some coarsely crystalline rocks still show large remanent anomalies. Recently, our interest has been to understand the mineralogical carriers of this hard, commonly billion-years-old magnetization. OCEANIC CRUST The global oceans are floored by a dense crust less than 10 km thick, produced continuously at the mid-ocean ridges by magma rising, solidifying and cooling. Rocks acquire a thermoremanent magnetization aligned with the Earth’s magnetic field, which episodically reverses its polarity. Because the ages of polarity reversal are now well established from records in lavas and sediments, the oceanic remanent magnetic anomalies can be directly transformed into a map of the age of global oceanic floor (Fig. 3). Oceanic anomalies dominated by remanence are commonly due to members of the magnetite–ulvöspinel solid solution or oxidized equivalents. A fascinating observation is that, worldwide, the magneticsignal amplitude systematically varies from high to low and then back to high amplitude when moving away from the mid-ocean ridges (Bleil and Petersen 1983). Because continental basalts of similar age do not show this effect, this amplitude variation reflects, at least partly, progressive lowtemperature oxidation of titanomagnetite in the uppermost oceanic crustal layer (Matzka et al. 2003). Which signal fraction arises from geomagnetic-field intensity variations is a yet-unsolved problem of paleomagnetism (Valet 2003). A B C (A) The age of global ocean floor determined from the geomagnetic reversal chronology (after Müller et al. 2008). Warm colours indicate young crust, cold colours older crust. (B) Inset from A displaying in detail the age of the southern North Atlantic Ocean. Shaded relief (dark = normal polarity; light = reversed polarity) shows the normal and reversed polarities mapped by magnetic surveys (Maus et al. 2007). (C) Magnetic anomaly data profile (white lines shown in A and B) acquired by the ODP cruise 150 in the southern North Atlantic Ocean. The magnetic anomaly is calculated by subtracting the long wavelength of the magnetic reference field (IGRF). It results from the varying remanent magnetization of the ocean floor created during the last 120 million years. A model of the oceanic crust, magnetized with alternating polarities and subsiding as it cools, is shown below the magnetic profile. The light-green draped profile shows the true bathymetry (from ETOPO2). High amplitudes of the magnetic anomaly for the young oceanic crust (<30 Ma, red band) contrast with decreased amplitudes for the next 10 million years (light blue bands). Figure 3 The total magnetization, M tot, of a rock is the sum of the induced magnetization, M ind , which is a response to the external field, H, and the remanent magnetization, Mr , carried by magnetic minerals. In general, the magnetic anomaly related to a rock is positive (+) or negative (-) according to the sign of the projection of M tot onto H. Induced anomalies, where Q = M r/M ind << 1, are always positive, while remanent anomalies, where Q > 1, can have either sign, depending on their remanence direction. Figure 2 E lements 242 A ugus t 2009 CONTINENTAL CRUST The continental crust is mineralogically diverse, and remanence-dominated anomalies have various origins. Here we focus on a newly discovered source of anomalies related to the hematite–ilmenite series. We discuss the mineralogical background of this series and present three case studies to demonstrate its abundance and magnetic properties. Hematite–Ilmenite Series All minerals in the hematite–ilmenite series have rhombohedral structure involving layers of octahedrally coordinated cations. Hematite is a canted antiferromagnet (CAF) (see Harrison and Feinberg 2009 this issue) with a room-temperature magnetization of 2.1 kA/m (~0.4% that of magnetite) parallel to the (0001) basal plane. Ilmenite is paramagnetic (PM) above 57 K and therefore carries no magnetization on Earth at geologically relevant temperatures. The complexity of the phase diagram (Fig. 4) results from the interplay between cation ordering, magnetic ordering and exsolution processes. A B C Hematite–ilmenite phase diagram at 1 atmosphere showing composition–temperature relations involving Fe–Ti (long-dashed line) and magnetic (short-dashed line) ordering, miscibility gaps, and two ‘tricritical points’. A tricritical point on the Fe–Ti ordering curve at ≈57 mol% FeTiO3 and 1050 K creates the twophase region disordered paramagnetic PM R3̄c + ordered PM R3̄. The second tricritical point, on the magnetic ordering curve at ≈15 mol% FeTiO3 and 815 K, creates the two-phase region CAF R3̄c + PM R3̄c. Limbs of the PM R3̄c region converge at the eutectoid (E, ≈800 K) and the stable low-T assemblage CAF R3̄c hematite + PM R3̄ ilmenite. For compositions richer in hematite than E, titanohematite can magnetize at T > 800 K. For compositions richer in ilmenite than E, magnetization occurs only at <800 K, with exsolution of CAF hematite (a chemical reaction) from a host richer in ilmenite. Insets illustrate atomic configurations for ≈80 mol% FeTiO3 above (A) and below (B) the Fe–Ti ordering reaction, and for the fully exsolved case (C) with a CAF hematite lamella (HEM) and two contact layers(CL) in PM ilmenite (ILM). Figure 4 A Exsolution occurs at intermediate to low temperature (Burton 1991; Harrison 2006; Ghiorso and Evans 2008) and leads to the development of fine-scale intergrowths of CAF hematite and PM ilmenite (“hemo-ilmenite”) in slowly cooled rocks. Remarkably, these intergrowths are several times more magnetic than can be explained by the CAF moment of the hematite contained within them. Examination of the intergrowths using scanning electron and transmission electron microscopy (Fig. 5) shows that exsolution has taken place in diffusion-controlled steps. Commonly in the last stages, under slow cooling, final crops of lamellae are produced as thin as 1–3 nm, equivalent in thickness to just 1–2 unit cells. Recent work, described below, has demonstrated that the excess magnetization of these fine-scale intergrowths comes from the phase interfaces between nanoscale CAF hematite and PM ilmenite lamellae. Lamellar Magnetism Several case studies indicate that rocks containing finely exsolved hematite–ilmenite microstructures, with abundant (0001) nanoscale phase interfaces, create large remanencedominated anomalies (McEnroe and Brown 2000; McEnroe et al. 2001, 2002). Based on these observations, the theory of “lamellar magnetism” or chemical interface magnetization has been developed (Harrison and Becker 2001; Robinson et al. 2002, 2004). This theory claims that mixed-valence contact layers form at the interface between CAF hematite and PM ilmenite to reduce local ionic charge imbalance (Robinson et al. 2006) (Fig. 4). This hypothesis was further confirmed by ab initio calculations (Pentcheva and Nabi 2008). A contact layer carries an average magnetization of ~4.5 µB (where μB is the Bohr magneton, a measure of the electron magnetic dipole moment). The two contact layers on either side of a lamella are magnetized parallel to each other, yielding a total of 2 × 4.5 ≈ 9 µ B. This moment is counterbalanced by the opposite moment of one hematite layer at ~5 µ B, giving a net unbalanced “lamellar” moment of 2 × 4.5 – 5 ≈ 4 µ B. When the moments of individual lamellae are magnetically aligned with each other, the intensity of lamellar magnetism is proportional to the density of lamellae and the surface area of contact layers. Parallel alignment is most strongly favoured in crystals with (0001) parallel to the magnetizing field. Lamellar magnetism is thermally very stable and extremely resistant to demagnetization in alternating fields commonly 1000 times that of the Earth’s field. This makes it an ideal candidate for the generation of ancient crustal magnetic anomalies. Exchange Bias Proves Lamellar Magnetism Areas of negative remanent magnetization near Modum, Norway, contain metamorphic titanohematite with abundant nanoscale exsolution of ilmenite ("ilmeno-hematite"). Low-temperature magnetic measurements provide direct proof that the magnetic anomalies result from lamellar magne- B C (A) Electron backscatter image of an intergrowth of exsolved hematite and ilmenite, and minor magnetite, from pyroxene granulite, SW Sweden. (B) Electron backscatter image of hemo-ilmenite; hematite lamellae are white and ilmenite gray. (C) High-resolution TEM image of hemo-ilmenite, courtesy of Falko L angenhorst Figure 5 E lements 243 A ugus t 2009 tism (Fig. 6). Cooling the titanohematite and its NRM below the ordering temperature of ilmenite leads to a large shift of the low-temperature hysteresis loop (exchange bias). This shift can only be explained by an interaction between spins across the hematite–ilmenite interfaces, proving that the spins that generate the NRM must reside in the interfaces and cannot be due to defect moments or stressinduced moments, which occur in normal bulk hematite (Fabian et al. 2008). Exchange bias is an extremely important property for magnetic recording media like hard disks and solid-state memories. Despite intense research in magnetic material science, the exchange bias observed in these natural intergrowths is larger than any known in synthetic technical materials (McEnroe et al. 2007; Harrison et al. 2007). Thus, the same magnetic properties arising from the microstructures in the oxides which produced remanent crustal anomalies due to billion-year-old “memories” are templates for future storage devices. LAMELLAR MAGNETISM: A COMMON SOURCE OF CRUSTAL REMANENT ANOMALIES? Having established the physical mechanism of lamellar magnetism, it is important to understand its abundance and conditions of formation. Here we present three geographically and geologically different settings where lamellar magnetism contributes significantly to the magnetic anomaly. Anorthosites and a Layered Intrusion, Rogaland, Norway The Rogaland (~930 Ma) intrusive province is known for massif anorthosites, hemo-ilmenite ores, and the BjerkreimSokndal (BKS) layered intrusion. Figure 7a is part of a regional aeromagnetic map, in which magnetic highs (redviolet) of over 2500 nT are separated by prominent magnetic lows (blue) down to -3500 nT. Figure 7b is a perspective from the east from a high-resolution helicopter survey. Highs are due to induced magnetization of coarse-grained magnetite; lows are primarily due to the reversed NRM of hemo-ilmenite. The anorthosite bodies contain finely exsolved hemo-ilmenite +/- magnetite and have negative anomalies. The NRM acquired ~930 million years ago is steeply inclined. High Q values, from 6 to 26, reflect abundance of hemo-ilmenite. Within the Åna-Sira Anorthosite, with Mr = 4 A/m and Mind of only 0.25 A/m, lies the Tellnes Norite, which, with ~30% hemo-ilmenite, is the world’s second-largest bedrock source of ilmenite. It also has a negative remanent anomaly. The Håland-Helleren Anorthosite has an even larger Mr (6 A/m), but also a larger Mind (1 A/m) due to its additional magnetite content. These anorthosites have NRM intensities similar to or higher than those of Tertiary basalts (Brown and McEnroe 2008), but lower susceptibilities, a hallmark of lamellar magnetism. The 7 km thick BKS layered intrusion is in a doubly plunging syncline. The southern Sokndal lobe is mostly marked by the occurrence of magnetite-bearing rocks. The northern Bjerkreim lobe is outlined by the huge curving negative magnetic anomaly in the northern part of Figure 7a. The BKS intrusion has 5 megacyclic units. Each began with the intrusion of a new, slightly more primitive magma into the bottom of the chamber; this magma mixed with previous magma, and then it returned to a more normal path of fractional crystallization (Wilson et al. 1996). In terms of oxides, the most primitive magmas locally crystallized a small amount of Cr-rich spinel, then ferri-ilmenite with gradually declining hematite content until the melts reached saturation with magnetite. Further crystallization led to ilmenite with lower hematite content without hematite exsolution. The progression from ferri-ilmenite precipitation, with hemo-ilmenite crystallization upon cooling, to magnetite precipitation accompanied by ferri-ilmenite, and finally to precipitation of near-end-member ilmenite has profound effects on magnetic properties and the magnetic map (McEnroe et al. 2001, 2008). Magnetic highs correspond to magnetite with end-member ilmenite horizons. Remanent magnetic lows (blue in Fig. 7a) outline the hemo-ilmenite-bearing horizons in which lamellar magnetism controls the magnetic properties. The BKS intrusion is of economic interest for potential vanadium-magnetite, apatite and ilmenite deposits. A B Exchange bias in a rock from Norway, creates an asymmetric hysteresis loop of magnetization, m, versus applied field, B, after cooling the initial NRM in zero-field to 5 K. The difference between the upper and lower branches (orange) is bimodal, while saturation magnetization, Ms, is symmetric (after Fabian et al. 2008). The exchange bias originates from uncompensated moments of ilmenite lamellae interacting with the CAF hematite matrix. Figure 6 E lements (A) Regional aeromagnetic map covering part of Rogaland, Norway (modified from McEnroe et al. 2008). H indicates the southern end of the Heskestad anomaly; Å-S: Åna-Sira; HH: Håland Helleren anorthosites; G: Garsaknatt leuconorite; S and BK: Sokndal and Bjerkreim lobes of BKS intrusion. (B) Shaded 3D oblique perspective view from the east from a helicopter survey showing the Heskestad anomaly, the Sokndal lobe of the BKS layered intrusion and the Åna-Sira Anorthosite Figure 7 244 A ugus t 2009 The striking anomaly at Heskestad (H in Fig. 7), centred over a norite layer, continues for 25 km to the northwest. Near Heskestad, the magma chamber was expanding laterally southward during crystallization. Along one groundmagnetic profile in this region, the intensity changes from a high of 53,000 nT to a low of 23,000 nT over a distance of 200 m, canceling more than 50% of the local geomagnetic field of ~50,000 nT. The source of the anomaly is a norite (McEnroe et al. 2004), which has a huge Mr (25 A/m) and a large Mind (4 A/m), resulting in a high Q (6). The two likely candidates for the remanence are 2% hemo-ilmenite, and orthopyroxenes with hemo-ilmenite exsolution. Both cases provide lamellar magnetism. A possible explanation combines two factors: (1) strong alignment of the pyroxenes containing oriented hemo-ilmenite lamellae in a favourable orientation with respect to the Proterozoic magnetizing field, and (2) acquisition of an inverse induced magnetization by magnetite from the local inverse stray field, therefore adding to the remanent magnetic vector. The Rogaland anomalies are not a unique case of lamellar remanence in Scandinavia. A larger effect of ilmeno-hematite and hemo-ilmenite with nanoscale exsolution lamellae occurs over granulites in southwest Sweden (McEnroe et al. 2001). The granulitic rocks have an average NRM of 5 A/m and only 1.4 A/m of induced magnetization, resulting in a high Q value of 3.6. Again, lamellar magnetism provides high coercivity and thermal stability of the NRM, making these rocks excellent carriers of the ancient magnetic field. Metamorphosed Altered Volcanics, Adirondack Mountains, USA Remanence-dominated anomalies are common where the crust is oxidized. The rocks will have high NRMs, low susceptibility and high Q values. An example is the microcline– sillimanite gneiss of the Russell Belt (Fig. 8) in the Adirondack Mountains, USA, where Balsley and Buddington (1958) made a classic study of chemistry, petrology and magnetic anomalies. The anomaly is 2250 nT below background in the airborne survey and registers -5000 nT at ground level (McEnroe and Brown 2000). These rocks have an induced magnetization of only 0.1 A/m, compared to NRMs of 3.5 A/m, resulting in an extreme Q of 35. The magnetic mineralogy is dominated by titanohematite with ilmenite exsolution (ilmeno-hematite) with minor rutile and pyrophanite (MnTiO3) lamellae. Multiple generations of lamellae, from the micron scale to unit-cell size, are common (Kasama et al. 2004). Here, lamellar magnetism is responsible for the large NRMs, as well as the high coercivity needed to preserve the magnetization for nearly 1 billion years. Samples do not demagnetize in alternating fields of 100 mT, more than 1000 times the present-day field strength. Their magnetic memories easily survived the thousands of magnetic-field reversals on Earth since Mesoproterozoic time. Metamorphic Hematite, South Australia: A New Type of Lamellar Magnetism? The last case study concerns a positive remanence-controlled anomaly at the Peculiar Knob (PK) deposit, South Australia, and widens the scope of possible sources of lamellar magnetism. PK is a metamorphosed iron formation occurring under 25 m of sediment, within the Paleoproterozoic basement of the Mount Woods Inlier, northern Gawler Craton. It was discovered by an airborne-magnetic survey, and later groundmagnetic and gravity surveys showed extreme anomalies. The ground-level magnetic anomaly is 30,000 nT above background and is dominated by remanent magnetization acquired during cooling from Mesoproterozoic metamorphic conditions (Schmidt et al. 2007). Though first thought to be a massive magnetite deposit that created a very large induced anomaly, exploratory drill cores intersecting the E lements Geological and aeromagnetic map of part of the Russell Belt. Stippled unit is microcline granite gneiss with associated metasedimentary layers; gagn, alaskite gneiss; gba, anorthosite gabbro gneiss; ghgn, hornblende-microcline-oligoclase granite gneiss; ms, metasedimentary rocks. Magnetic intervals of 500 nT are coloured. The inset shows the location of the Russell Belt (small box) within the Adirondack Mountains, USA (stippled area). Modified from M cEnroe and B rown (2000) and Balsley and B uddington (1958) Figure 8 body were dominated by coarsely crystalline end-member hematite. The question was: Did the drilling miss the magnetite deposit or were the drill cores representative? The magnetic properties from the 4 drill holes yielded upward-directed NRMs of from 36 to 227 A/m, averaging 190 A/m. The anomaly was then successfully modeled using a large NRM of 120 A/m. As a result, the “magnetite deposit” vanished. Why did these rocks have such large NRMs? In reflected light at high magnification, and only in oil, some coarse hematite crystals showed a very fine texture. Microprobe traverses across coarse crystals yielded sums consistently too high for pure hematite, and the samples also had unusually large coercivities. These observations led to the interpretation that some hematite contained fine intergrowths of magnetite and/or maghemite on their (0001) planes, which would increase the coercivity, stabilize the NRM and result in a larger remanence-dominated anomaly than would be produced by pure hematite. Current studies are targeted on whether a new variety of lamellar (interface) magnetism can explain the magnetic properties at PK. This is of major importance for exploration, because many of the magnetic target rocks of the Mount Woods Inlier are associated with base metal and Cu–Au (± U and Ag) mineralization. The nearby giant Olympic Dam hydrothermal Cu–U–Au–Ag deposit occurs in an enormous volume of semi-massive hematite. RAMIFICATIONS These case studies indicate that lamellar magnetism is not exotic, but a common cause of remanent magnetic anomalies. Temperature–pressure experiments at 10 kb and 580 o C show that lamellae are stable and not resorbed (McEnroe et al. 2004), as would be predicted from Figure 4, thus indicating that lamellar magnetism of considerable strength 245 A ugus t 2009 may persist deep in the crust. The other major source for remanent anomalies, fine-grained magnetite, is coarsened and demagnetized under such conditions. Are deep crustal magnetic anomalies due to lamellar magnetism? If this is the case, a main paradigm of crustal magnetism must be reconsidered: the paradigm that there are no crustal magnetic rocks below the depth at which the geotherm crosses magnetite’s Curie-temperature of 580 oC. By understanding the mineral-magnetic properties of rocks which create large remanent anomalies on Earth, we gain insight into possible mechanisms for generating magnetic signals from other planets and moons of the solar system. On Mars, active magnetic field generation ceased billions of years ago, and satellites detect only the residual remanent magnetization of magnetic minerals in crustal rocks. Retention of strong remanence over such time spans requires good magnetic stability. Lamellar magnetism can provide these properties. These unusual properties are also of interest for technological applications. The unbalanced interface REFERENCES Aubert J, Aurnou J, Wicht J (2008) The magnetic structure of convection-driven numerical dynamos. Geophysical Journal International 172: 945-956 Balsley JR, Buddington AF (1958) Irontitanium oxide minerals, rocks, and aeromagnetic anomalies of the Adirondack area, New York. Economic Geology 53: 777-805 Bleil U, Petersen N (1983) Variations in magnetization intensity and low-temperature titanomagnetite oxidation of ocean floor basalts. Nature 301: 384-388 Brown LL, McEnroe SA (2008) Magnetic properties of anorthosites: A forgotten source for planetary magnetic anomalies? 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