Inicio  /  Geosciences  /  Vol: 8 Núm: 9 Par: Septemb (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

d13C and d18O Stable Isotope Analysis Applied to Detect Technological Variations and Weathering Processes of Ancient Lime and Hydraulic Mortars

Elissavet Dotsika    
Dafni Kyropoulou    
Vassilios Christaras and Georgios Diamantopoulos    

Resumen

Samples of mortars were collected from lime and hydraulic mortars affected by environmental degradation. A total of 63 samples were obtained from Hellenistic, Late Roman and Byzantine historic constructions located at Kavala, Drama and Makrygialos in North Greece. Samples were collected in sections from the surface up to 6 cm deep using a drill-core material. The first sample was collected from the external layer, while the internal samples were collected each 1cm beeper from the previous, in order to monitor the moisture ingress. Isotopic data will make it possible to create an ideal Hellenistic and Byzantine mortar layer and to provide weathering gradients. The isotopic values comprise a range of δ13C and δ18O values from −17.1‰ to 1.2‰ and −25.9‰ to −2‰, respectively. The weathering process of Hellenistic and Byzantine are expressed, by the regression lines δ18Ocalcite matrix = 0.6 × δ13Ccalcite matrix − 1.9 and δ18Ocalcite matrix = 0.6 × δ13Ccalcite matrix − 2.0 for hydraulic and Lime mortars respectively. Pronounced isotopic shift to heavy or light δ13C and δ18O in the carbonate matrix was attributed to the primary source of CO2 (atmospheric versus biogenic) and H2O (evaporation of local primary water), in residual limestone and in secondary processes such as recrystallization of calcite with pore water and salts attack. Exogenic processes related to biological growth are responsible for further alterations of δ18O and δ13C in lime mortars. This study indicated that stable isotope analysis is an excellent tool to fingerprint the origin of carbonate, the environmental setting conditions of mortar, origin of CO2 and water during calcite formation and to determine the weathering depth and the potential secondary degradation mechanisms.

Palabras claves

 Artículos similares

       
 
Jadranka Bare?ic, Sanja Faivre, Andreja Sironic, Damir Borkovic, Ivanka Lovrencic Mikelic, Russel N. Drysdale and Ines Krajcar Bronic    
Tufa is a fresh-water surface calcium carbonate deposit precipitated at or near ambient temperature, and commonly contains the remains of macro- and microphytes. Many Holocene tufas are found along the Zrmanja River, Dalmatian karst, Croatia. In this wor... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Augusto Nicolás Varela, María Sol Raigemborn, Patricio Emmanuel Santamarina, Sabrina Lizzoli, Thierry Adatte and Ulrich Heimhofer    
The Cenomanian Mata Amarilla Formation (MAF) in southern Patagonia (~55° S paleolatitude, Austral-Magallanes Basin, Argentina) is composed mainly of stacked fluvial deposits with intercalated paleosols, which document Cenomanian environments at high-pale... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Nikolai Pedentchouk, Barry Bennett and Steve Larter    
This study investigates the magnitude and direction of stable C and H isotope shifts of n-C15?30 alkanes from biodegraded oils sourced from Type II (Oil suite S) and Type II/III (Oil suite H) kerogens. Compound-specific isotope data show a 2.0? 13C-enric... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Yuichi Morishita and Ayaka Wada    
The Kamioka mine, located in Gifu Prefecture in Japan, is famous for the large water Cherenkov detector system, the Super-Kamiokande. The Kamioka skarn-type Pb?Zn deposits are formed in crystalline limestone and are replaced by skarn minerals within the ... ver más
Revista: Geosciences

 
Henrik Drake, Magnus Ivarsson and Christine Heim    
The oceanic and continental lithosphere constitutes Earth?s largest microbial habitat, yet it is scarcely investigated and not well understood. The physical and chemical properties here are distinctly different from the overlaying soils and the hydrosphe... ver más
Revista: Geosciences