Author:
Friedman Irving,Trembour Fred W.,Smith George I.,Smith Franklin L.
Abstract
AbstractExperiments carried out under temperatures and relative humidities that approximate ambient conditions show that the rate of hydration of obsidian is a function of the relative humidity, as well as of previously established variables of temperature and obsidian chemical composition. Measurements of the relative humidity of soil at 25 sites and at depths of between 0.01 and 2 m below ground show that in most soil environments, at depths below about 0.25 m, the relative humidity is constant at 100%. We have found that the thickness of the hydrated layer developed on obsidian outcrops exposed to the sun and to relative humidities of 30-90% is similar to that formed on other portions of the outcrop that were shielded from the sun and exposed to a relative humidity of approximately 100%. Surface samples of obsidian exposed to solar heating should hydrate more rapidly than samples buried in the ground. However, the effect of the lower mean relative humidity experiences by surface samples tends to compensate for the elevated temperature, which may explain why obsidian hydration ages of surface samples usually approximate those derived from buried samples.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Earth-Surface Processes,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous)
Reference20 articles.
1. Hydration Rate of Obsidian
2. Hydration dating of volcanism at Newberry Craters, Oregon.;Friedman;U.S. Geological Survey Journal of Research,1977
3. Obsidian Hydration Rate for the Klamath Basin of California and Oregon
4. The Experimental Hydration of Obsidian as a Function of Relative Humidity and Temperature
5. Intrinsic hydration rate dating of obsidian.;Ambrose;In “Advances in Obsidian Glass Studies”,1976
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