http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/individuo/prodotto/ID19486
What kind of volcanite the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela UNESCO's Heritage site are made of ? (Articolo in rivista)
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- What kind of volcanite the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela UNESCO's Heritage site are made of ? (Articolo in rivista) (literal)
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- 2011-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 (literal)
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A. Renzulli, F. Antonelli, C. Margottini, P. Santi, F. Fratini (2011)
What kind of volcanite the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela UNESCO's Heritage site are made of ?
in Journal of cultural heritage
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- A. Renzulli, F. Antonelli, C. Margottini, P. Santi, F. Fratini (literal)
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- ISI Web of Science (WOS) (literal)
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- A. Renzulli, F. Antonelli, P. Santi, Università degli Studi di Urbino Carlo Bo
C. Margottini, Dipartimento Difesa del Suolo, Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale, ISPRA, 00185 Roma, Italy
F. Fratini, ICVBC CNR
(literal)
- Titolo
- What kind of volcanite the rock-hewn churches of Lalibela UNESCO's Heritage site are made of ? (literal)
- Abstract
- The extraordinary monumental complex of the 11 rock-hewn churches of Lalibela, included in the UNESCOs world heritage list since 1978, attracted the attention of the conservation science community mainly for their severe chemical weathering, physical decay and structural instability. This study, based on classical modal mineralogy and petrography of samples coming from seven churches (Biet Medhane-Alem, Biet Mariam, Trinity Church, Biet Giyorgis, Biet Amanuel, Biet Abba-Lebanos and Biet Gabriel Rufael), sorts out ambiguous rock-nomenclatures and lithological definitions, which have been found in the literature of the last three decades. We can now affirm that the churches were carved in hydrothermally altered and partially lateritized basaltic scorias (nearly aphyric and highly vesicular). The hewn
rock, often reported in literature as weathered basic tuffs, can be thus classified as a basaltic scoria
deposit, partially welded by syn-post magmatic hydrothermal alteration. Its pyroclastic origin may have
strongly enhanced selective weathering. The hewn rock rests on a massive to slightly fractured basalt, still
present as bedrock of the Lalibela churches and belonging to lava sequences of the Northern Ethiopian
Plateau (continental flood basalts). Despite the severe hydrothermal alteration and partial lateritization
of the samples, modal mineralogy, petrography and major-trace elements chemistry strongly suggest
that the studied clinopyroxene-olivine transitional basaltic scorias of the churches derive from the same
magma type, which gave rise to the Lalibela high-titanium group 2 (HT2) of the Northern Ethiopian
Plateau lava flows. The late-stage and post-magmatic phases (smectites, zeolites and calcite) scattered
in the groundmass and filling the large subspherical vesicles of the basaltic scorias really represent a
typical hydrothermal facies of continental flood basalts. Most of the secondary hydrothermal minerals
are pointed out first, as well as appropriate modal mineralogy and petrography, providing useful insights
towards unraveling the causes of deterioration of these world heritage monuments. A special emphasis
is devoted to the presence of zeolite minerals, never pointed out before this study in the rock-hewn
churches of Lalibela, and their possible roles on cyclic adsorbing and release of water
(literal)
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