Browsing by Author "Miranda, J. M."
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- Preliminary results of a study of magnetic properties in the Foum-Zguid dyke (Morocco)Publication . Silva, P. F.; Marques, F. O.; Henry, B.; Mateus, A.; Lourenço, Nuno; Miranda, J. M.This work focuses on the study of flow and propagation of magma using rock magnetic analyses along sections across the thick Jurassic dyke of Foum-Zguid (Southern Morocco). Thermomagnetic data show that Ti-poor titanomagnetite is the main magnetic carrier. Petrographic analysis shows that the main Ti phase (ilmenite) occurs either as lamellae within spinel (center of the dyke) or as isolated grains (dyke margin). Bulk magnetic properties display distinct behavior according to the distance to the dyke margin; grain size of the main magnetic carrier decreases towards the center of the dyke, while the natural remanent magnetization and the bulk magnetic susceptibility increase. Only the magnetic susceptibility ellipsoid close to the dyke margin corresponds to that usually found in thin dykes, with the magnetic foliation sub parallel to dyke margins. Maximum principal axis is in most cases either parallel or perpendicular to the intersection between the planes of magnetic foliation and dyke wall. Moreover, when this axis is perpendicular to the intersection it is associated with a more oblate magnetic susceptibility ellipsoid shape, indicating the presence of complex magnetic fabrics. The studied magnetic properties show that, in this 100 m wide thick dyke, flow structures related with dyke propagation are only preserved close to the quickly cooled dyke margins. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
- Reevaluation of magnetic chrons in the North Atlantic between 35 degrees N and 47 degrees N: implications for the formation of the Azores Triple Junction and associated plateauPublication . Luis, Joaquim; Miranda, J. M.In this paper we present a new magnetic compilation for an area of the North Atlantic located between 35 degrees N and 47 degrees N and up to anomaly 33r. We also present a strategy to pick magnetic isochrones and compute finite rotation poles. This technique is based on a continuous reduction to the pole technique and some basic assumptions regarding the direction of the remanent magnetization vector. A cost function that measures the misfit between interpreted and rotated isochrones and the systematic exploitation of the parameter space is used to compute the best set of finite Eulerian rotations for the chrons 5, 6, 6C, 11-12, 13, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 32, 33, and 33r. This set of chrons and poles is used to discuss the evolution of the North Atlantic close to Iberia and, in particular, the onset and early development of the Azores Triple Junction area. We show that the relative motion between the Eurasian and the African plates can be coherently described in terms of rigid plate kinematics, respecting both the anomalies shapes and the precise location of the main structural elements of the area: the Pico Fracture Zone, the East Azores Fracture Zone, and the Gloria Fault. We distinguish from the magnetic point of view two different areas of the Azores plateau: the South Azores domain where almost undisturbed NNW magnetic lineations can be found and the Azores domain close to the topographic highs and with no systematic magnetic stripping with the exception of a few recent lineations, probably Matuyama and Brunhes. We present an approximate reconstruction of the plate configuration after chron 18 to conclude that the attachment of Iberia to Eurasia was younger than previously thought (lower Miocene), triggering the formation of the Azores domain, in which stretching took place essentially in the last 20 Ma at an average rate of similar to 3.8 mm/a, and progressively attaching the South Azores domain to the African plate by a northward progression of the triple junction.
- Variation of magnetic properties in sedimentary rocks hosting the Foum Zguid dyke (southern Morocco): combined effects of re-crystallization and Fe-metasomatismPublication . Silva, P. F.; Henry, B.; Marques, F. O.; Mateus, A.; Madureira, P.; Lourenco, N.; Miranda, J. M.The effects of dyke intrusion on the magnetic properties of host sedimentary rocks are still poorly understood. Therefore, we have evaluated bulk magnetic parameters of standard palaeomagnetic samples collected along several sections across the sediments hosting the Foum Zguid dyke in southern Morocco. The study has been completed with the evaluation of the magnetic fabric after laboratory application of sequential heating experiments. The present study shows that: (1) close to Fourn Zguid dykes, the variations of the bulk magnetic parameters and of the magnetic fabric is strongly related with re-crystallization and Fe-metasomatism intensity. (2) The thermal experiments on AMS of samples collected farther from the dyke and, thus, less affected by heating during dyke emplacement, indicate that 300-400 degrees C is the minimum experimental temperature necessary to trigger appreciable transformations of the pre-existing magnetic fabrics. For temperatures higher than ca. 580 degrees C, the magnetic fabric transformations are fully realized, with complete transposition of the initial fabric to a fabric similar to that of samples collected close to the dyke. Therefore, measured variations of the magnetic fabric can be used to evaluate re-crystallization temperatures experienced by the host sedimentary rock during dyke emplacement. The distinct magnetic behaviour observed along the cross-sections strongly suggests that samples collected farther from the dyke margins did not experience thermal episodes with temperatures higher than 300 degrees C after dyke emplacement. (3) AMS data shows a gradual variation of the magnetic fabric with distance from the dyke margin, from sub-horizontal K-3 away from the dyke to vertical K3 close to the dyke. Experimental heating shows that heat alone can be responsible for this strong variation. Therefore, such orientation changes should not be unequivocally interpreted as the result of a stress field (resulting from the emplacement of the dyke, for instance). (4) Magnetic studies prove to be a very sensitive tool to assess rock magnetic transformations, thermally and chemically induced by dyke intrusion in hosting sediments. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
