A preliminary study of the phycological degradation of natural stone masonry.

Environ Geochem Health

ACM Centre, Division of Civil Engineering and Construction, University of Paisley, High Street, PA1 2BE, Paisley, UK.

Published: March 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers have found that biological agents, alongside physical and chemical factors, play a significant role in the weathering of stone, particularly in historic buildings and monuments.
  • Studies conducted in Paisley focus on how specific micro-organisms, like various species of green algae, affect key sedimentary rock minerals such as Albite, Calcite, and Quartz.
  • Initial findings show evidence of biologically mediated mineral etching, changing pH levels over 90 days, and varying elemental release patterns from different minerals during the experiments.

Article Abstract

For many years it has been realised that the weathering of stone is not merely determined by physical and chemical factors but also by biological agents. When the stone in question is a historic building or monument, the damage done constitutes an irretrievable loss of our heritage and history. Laboratory studies have commenced in Paisley to study the effect of photoautotrophs on the major sedimentary rock forming minerals, with a view to expanding this work to study the overall effect of these micro-organisms on heritage masonry. Tests were carried out on Albite, Calcite, Dolomite, Orthoclase, Siderite and Quartz, using axenic cultures of the following: Chlorella vulgaris, Chlorococcum tetrasporum, Scenedesmus obliquus, Oocystis marsonii, Stichococcus bacillaris. The rock chips were immersed in either water or bolds basal media and exposed to a mix of the micro-organisms listed above and then tested weekly for their pH, fortnightly for the waters chemical composition using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES) and visually utilising the university's SEM facilities. Work so far has revealed biologically mediated etching of minerals, a well-defined pH profile over a period of 90 days, as well as a variety of elemental release patterns for the different minerals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/a:1021221603859DOI Listing

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