Abstract
The Chicxulub impact event at ca. 66 Ma left in its wake the only complex crater on Earth with a preserved peak ring, characterized by a well-developed magnetic anomaly low. To date, little is known about its magnetic properties. The joint Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) and International Continental Scientific Drilling Program (ICDP) Expedition 364 drill core M0077A revealed that the peak ring consists of uplifted and strongly deformed granitoid basement rocks overlain by a 130-m-thick impact melt and suevite layer. Pre- and postimpact hydrothermal systems affected this basement with maximum temperatures up to 450 °C. We used microscopy, mineral chemistry, temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility, and hysteresis properties to characterize the magnetic mineralogy of pre-, syn-, and postimpact rocks. Compared to its amount of pure, stoichiometric shocked magnetite, the granitoid basement shows low magnetic susceptibility, which is in line with earlier experimental studies indicating that shock reduces magnetic susceptibility. Cation-substituted magnetite with varying compositions in the melt rocks carries a higher induced and remanent magnetization compared to the basement. In the granitoid basement, magnetite was partially oxidized to hematite by a pre-impact hydrothermal event, but at lithological contacts with high-temperature impact melt rock, this hematite was locally retransformed back to magnetite. Elsewhere in the granitoid basement, the temperature reached in the hydrothermal system was too low for hematite retransformation. It was also too low to anneal all the lattice defects in the shocked magnetite, which likely occurs above 540 °C. The presence of shocked magnetite in the granitoid basement well explains the magnetic anomaly low due to its unusually low induced magnetization.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 307-328 |
| Number of pages | 22 |
| Journal | Bulletin of the Geological Society of America |
| Volume | 136 |
| Issue number | 1-2 |
| Early online date | 26 May 2023 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jan 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2024 Geological Society of America. All Rights Reserved.
Funding
The authors would like to thank Sean Gulick, Joanna Morgan, and Michelle Penkrot for their assistance in the sampling process. B.D.L. Mendes would like to thank Ruben Winstel for assistance in the laboratory. This work was funded by the German Research Foundation, project number 432762445, and partially supported by the National Science Centre (NCN), Poland, in the frame of scientific project no. 2019/03/X/ ST10/00139. We acknowledge the thorough reviews by Daniel R. Franco and three anonymous reviewers.
| Funders | Funder number |
|---|---|
| Sean Gulick | |
| Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft | 432762445 |
| Narodowe Centrum Nauki | 2019/03/X/ ST10/00139 |