“…Some effects, i.e., nonstoichiometry, lattice defects, oxidation, and ambient pressure, can decrease T v [e.g., Aragón et al ., ; Özdemir et al ., ; Moskowitz et al ., ; Kosterov , ; Rozenberg et al ., ; Özdemir and Dunlop , ]. Lower T v temperatures (often near 100 K) have been reported commonly for whole cell MTB samples [ Moskowitz et al ., ; Weiss et al ., ; Pan et al ., ; Kopp et al ., ; Prozorov et al ., ; Moskowitz et al ., ; Li et al ., , ; Chang et al ., ] and magnetofossils [e.g., Smirnov and Tarduno , ; Pan et al ., ; Roberts et al ., ; Chang et al ., , ]. In contrast, natural inorganic and synthetic stoichiometric magnetite samples often have T v close to 120 K [e.g., Özdemir et al ., ; Moskowitz et al ., ; Muxworthy and McClelland , ; Prozorov et al ., ].…”