Spheroidal weathering

Spheroidal weathering is a form of chemical weathering that affects jointed bedrock and results in the formation of concentric or spherical layers of highly decayed rock within weathered bedrock that is known as saprolite. When saprolite is exposed by physical erosion, these concentric layers peel (spall) off as concentric shells much like the layers of a peeled onion. Within saprolite, spheroidal weathering often creates rounded boulders, known as corestones or woolsack, of relatively unweathered rock. Spheroidal weathering is also called onion skin weathering, concentric weathering, spherical weathering, or woolsack weathering.[1][2][3][4]

Spheroidal or woolsack weathering in granite on Haytor, Dartmoor, England
Spheroidal weathering in granite, Estaca de Bares, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain).
Woolsack weathering in sandstone at the Externsteine rocks, Teutoburg Forest, Germany
Corestones near Musina, South Africa that were created by spherodial weathering and exposed by the removal of surrounding saprolite by erosion.
Spheroidal weathering of a dolerite dyke, Pilbara, Western Australia

Weathering process

Spheroidal weathering is the result of chemical weathering of systematically jointed, massive rocks, including granite, dolerite, basalt and sedimentary rocks such as silicified sandstone. It occurs as the result of the chemical alteration of such rocks along intersecting joints. The chemical alteration of the rock results in the formation of abundant secondary minerals such as kaolinite, sericite, serpentine, montmorillonite, and chlorite and a corresponding increase in the volume of the altered rock. When the joints within bedrock form a 3-dimensional network, they subdivide it into separate blocks, often in the form of rough cubes or rectangular prisms that are bounded by these joints. Because water can penetrate the bedrock along these joints, the near-surface bedrock will be altered by weathering progressively inward along the faces of these blocks. The alteration by weathering of the bedrock will be greatest along the corners of each block, followed by the edges, and finally the faces of the cube. The differences in weathering rates between the corners, edges, and faces of a bedrock block will result in the formation of spheroidal layers of altered rock that surround an unaltered rounded boulder-size core of relatively unaltered rock known as a corestone or woolsack. Spheroidal weathering has often been incorrectly attributed solely to various types of physical weathering.[1][2][5]

Frequently, erosion has removed the layers of altered rock and other saprolite surrounding corestones that were produced by spheroidal weathering. This leaves many corestones as freestanding boulders on the ground's surface. Often the spheroidal weathering, which created these corestones and the enclosing saprolite occurred in the prehistoric past during periods of humid, even tropical climates. Frequently, the removal of the saprolite by erosion and exposure of corestones as freestanding residual boulders, tors, or other landforms occurs many thousands of years later and during vastly different climatic conditions.[1][2][6][7]

Depending on local environmental conditions, spheroidal weathering of bedrock blocks defined by tectonically induced joints and fractures may result in the formation of prominent and well-defined Liesegang rings within these blocks. These blocks typically consist of bedrock blocks (Liesegang blocks), which are bounded on their periphery by joints and fractures, and, in sedimentary rocks, bedding planes above and below. Each Liesegang block consists of a relatively unaltered core surrounded by concentric, alternating shells of iron-poor (intermediate shells) and iron-rich ('iron' shells) composition which make up the Liesegang rings. These iron-poor and iron-rich shells follow the configuration of the outer shape of the block and are sub-parallel to its sides. The iron-rich and iron-poor shells vary in degree of cementation and, as a result, can produce box work weathering structures during subsequent erosion. The degree of development of Liesegang rings as the result of weathering depends upon the spacing of the joint systems, groundwater flow, local topography, bedrock composition, and bed thickness.[8]

gollark: Well, with shell systems, you can chain tools together and they're dynamically loaded/executed from the filesystem.
gollark: You said 30. Then 80. Then 140.
gollark: > willapiohazard.
gollark: > null-terminated stringno.
gollark: JSON can apparently be parsed at several GB/s, and msgpack is more efficient, soooo...

See also

References

  1. Fairbridge, RW (1968) Spheroidal Weathering. in RW Fairbridge, ed., pp. 1041–1044, The Encyclopedia of Geomorphology, Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences, vol. III. Reinhold Book Corporation, New York, New York.
  2. Ollier, C.D. (1971). Causes of spheroidal weathering. Earth-Science Reviews 7:127–141.
  3. Neuendorf, KKE, JP Mehl, Jr., and JA Jackson, eds. (2005) Glossary of Geology (5th ed.). Alexandria, Virginia, American Geological Institute. 779 pp. ISBN 0-922152-76-4
  4. Kolawole, F.; Anifowose, A. Y. B. (2011-01-01). "Talus Caves: Geotourist Attractions Formed by Spheroidal and Exfoliation Weathering on Akure-Ado Inselbergs, Southwestern Nigeria". Ethiopian Journal of Environmental Studies and Management. 4 (3): 1–6. doi:10.4314/ejesm.v4i3.1. ISSN 1998-0507.
  5. Heald, MT, TJ Hollingsworth and RM Smith (1979) Alteration of Sandstone as Revealed by Spheroidal Weathering. Journal of Sedimentary Petrology. 49(3):901–909.
  6. Twidale, C.R., and J.R. Vidal Romani (2005) Landforms and Geology of Granite Terrains. A.A. Balkema Publishers Leiden, The Netherlands. 330 pp. ISBN 0-415-36435-3
  7. Migoń, P. (2006) Granite Landscapes of the World. (Geomorphological Landscapes of the World) Oxford University Press Inc., New York. 384 pp. ISBN 0-19-927368-5
  8. Shahabpour, J. (1998) Liesegang blocks from sandstone beds of the Hojedk Formation, Kerman, Iran. Geomorphology. 22:93–106
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