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Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
An International Geoscience Journal of the Geological Society of Australia
Volume 59, 2012 - Issue 7
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RESEARCH PAPERS

Physical weathering of slate gravestones in a Mediterranean climate

Pages 1021-1032 | Received 22 May 2012, Accepted 31 Jul 2012, Published online: 12 Oct 2012
 

Abstract

The physical weathering of vertically emplaced slate gravestones in two metropolitan cemeteries in Adelaide, South Australia, is documented and evaluated with respect to the prevailing Mediterranean climate. The gravestones bear inscriptions dating back to the 1860s, thus providing a time frame of about 150 years. It is proposed that a prime factor in the weathering regime is seasonal hydration during mild wet winters, followed by desiccation during the hot dry summers. This causes repeated expansion and contraction of the exposed constituent minerals, weakening the cohesive forces within the rock. Thermal expansion has promoted cleavage spalling of dislocated sheets of about 3 mm thickness from both the inscribed faces and the backs of the gravestones. Growth of moss and lichen along the weakened cleavages has further promoted opening of cracks parallel to the slate cleavage. Salt crystallisation has substantially damaged the lower parts of all the observed slate stones.

Acknowledgements

Barry Cooper, Keith Scott and Tom Raimondo are acknowledged and thanked for their helpful comments.

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