Abstract
AbstractThis study deals with stone deterioration in underground cultural heritage and geoheritage, correlating the origin, compositional features, and space–time changes of salt weathering with the rock properties (petrography and geochemistry) and environmental setting (microclimate and chemistry of rainwater and groundwater). The material of study is Oya-ishi, one of the best-known building stones of Japan; it is a porous and soft acid tuff with a long tradition of use in historical and modern architecture. A number of underground sites of cultural or commercial significance was investigated in central Japan, where Oya stone appears extensively affected by efflorescence growth. The efflorescences are composed of mixed sulfates, including gypsum, mirabilite, and thenardite, whose development depends on the stone–environment interaction. The underground environment is extremely humid and water is the main driving force of salt weathering, having a twofold function. First, it conveys the alteration of the rock components, in particular pyrite, glass (pumice, fiamme, and shards), zeolites (clinoptilolite), clay minerals (smectites), and feldspars, which release SO42−, Na+, and Ca2+ ions. Second, water controls the salt stability and cycles of crystallization/deliquescence and hydration/dehydration, depending on the site depth and seasonal microclimate fluctuations; in this regard, knowing the specific thermodynamic behavior of the phases involved can help predicting where and when salt weathering and the resulting stone damage are most severe.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geology,Pollution,Soil Science,Water Science and Technology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change
Reference36 articles.
1. Ando T, Oka S (1967) On the geology of Oya building stone and its destruction by excavation. Bullet Geol Surv Japan 18(1):1–37
2. Aoki H, Sasaki T, Oguchi CT, Matsukura Y (2005) Stability analysis on a rock collapse over an abandoned mine cave in Miocene tuff. Trans, Japanese Geomorphol Union 26(4):423–437
3. Aydan Ö, Rassouli FS, Ito T. (2011) Multi-parameter responses of Oya tuff during experiments on its time-dependent characteristics. In: Proceedings of the 45th US rock mechanics/geomechanics symposium, 26–29 June 2011, San Francisco, CA, USA, 1–10
4. Aydan Ö, Tano H. (2012) The damage to abandoned mines and quarries by the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11, 2011. In: Proceedings of the international symposium on engineering lessons learned from the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake, 1–4 March 2012, Tokyo, Japan, 981–992
5. Charola AE, Pühringer J, Steiger M (2007) Gypsum: a review of its role in the deterioration of building materials. Env Geol 52:339–352
Cited by
9 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献