Magnetic properties (IRM, ARM, xin, S-ratio at 0.3 T, room temperature (RT) hysteresis
and thermomagnetic curves) and geochemical data (Fe, S, Mn, Al, Ti, organic C) were
studied in two eastern Mediterranean boxcores (ABC26 and BC19) at a resolution of
3-5 mm. The boxcores contain sapropel S1 (9-6 kyr BP) at a few decimetres below seafloor.
The magnetic fraction consists predominantly of single-domain (SD) to pseudo-singledomain
(PSD) magnetite in the entire cores. The original input of magnetic grains
comes from two sources: aeolian dust (both cores) and volcanic ash from the Minoan
eruption of Santorini (core BC19 only). Non-steady-state diagenesis has changed
the magnetic mineralogy considerably in these alternating organic-rich/organic-poor
sediments. During deposition of sapropel S1, reductive diagenesis and pyritization in
and just below the sapropel caused lower magnetic intensities, coarser magnetic grain
sizes and partial maghemitization. In thermomagnetic curves two types of pyrite can be
identified: one oxidizes below 450 uC and the other above 450 uC. The higher oxidation
temperature is predominantly found below the sapropel. This may be related to the
microtexture of pyrite, which is euhedral below sapropels and mainly framboidal within
sapropels. Since the end of sapropel deposition a downward moving oxidation front has
oxidized the upper half (c. 5 cm) of the sapropel. The oxidized part of the sapropel is
enriched in diagenetically formed Fe oxides with relatively high coercivity and ARM.
The maximum coercivity is found in a distinct layer between the present-day Mn- and
Fe-redox boundaries at the top of the unoxidized sapropel. The freshly precipitated Fe
oxides in this centimetre-thick layer contain a mixture of superparamagnetic (SP) grains
and high-coercivity SD magnetite. Higher in the oxidized zone the freshly precipitated
Fe oxides have aged into generally slightly lower-coercivity SD grains, with relatively
high ARM. In addition to the diagenetic formation of Fe oxides at the top of the
sapropel, formation of a ferrimagnetic Fe monosulphide may have occurred within
the sapropel during later stages of diagenesis, which may have enhanced the ARM signal
in the organic-rich interval in particular