scholarly journals Petrography of aggregates in Luzon, Philippines: Identification of components and deleterious materials

2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Maria Ines Rosana Balangue-Tarriela ◽  
Cleodette L. Lagata ◽  
Raymond G. Leuterio ◽  
Ma. Lourdes Caluen-Abad

Petrography is one of a series of standard tests used to assess an aggregate’s components, mechanical qualities, durability, chemical stability, and alkali reactivity. In this study, aggregate materials were collected from rock exposures and/or alluvial deposits from four areas near Metro Manila, Philippines: Bulacan, Rizal, Pampanga, and Zambales. Transmitted light microscopy was conducted to identify rock types and characterise physical and chemical properties that may present potential problems when used as aggregate materials. The results show that the aggregates vary in terms of rock types and alteration type. Samples from Bulacan are mostly porphyritic basalt and fine to coarse-grained sandstone with veinlets of silica and carbonate. The presence of cavities and microfractures caused mainly by vesicles from the volcanic rocks was also observed. Rizal aggregates are composed predominantly of chloritized basalts and andesites with minor clastic rocks and tuffs. The aggregates from Zambales are products of erosion of the Zambales Ophiolite, mixed with the lahar deposits from the Pinatubo eruption. On the other hand, Pampanga aggregates are mostly lahar deposits, containing pumice, a poor choice for aggregate composition due to its low hardness, brittleness and vesiculated texture. Aside from the lithological classification, potentially alkali-reactive constituents were also observed in selected samples from the four sampling areas.

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 26-36
Author(s):  
N. N. Timonina ◽  

Recently various authors paid much attention to accessory minerals of clastic rocks to clarify the composition of the source area and formation conditions of terrigenous deposits. The paper describes some minerals of the heavy fraction of Triassic sandstones in the north of the Timan-Pechora oil and gas province (garnet, epidote, chromium spinels, ilmenite, etc.). We showed that the enrichment of sandstones with various mineral grains was controlled by not only the composition of the eroded rocks, but also by the hydrodynamics of the flow, as well as the method of transfer of clastic material. We noted that the features of heavy fraction minerals could be used to reconstruct sedimentation environments, taking into account their physical and chemical properties, distribution of minerals by fractions, and their stability during transportation.


Author(s):  
Andriy Yatsyshyn ◽  
Andriy Bogucki ◽  
Danuta Olszewska-Nejbert ◽  
Maciej Bąbel

The main lithological characteristics of the channel facies of the Susidovychi terrace, which correspond to the high (situated over the canyon) groups of Dnister terraces, were given. The investigations in the gravel pit at Kulakivtsi proved that the alluvium of the terrace has been formed in two stages. During the first stage, the lower 1.5 thick bed of the alluvium was deposited. The upper one, nearly 4 m thick alluvium bed was formed in the next, second one depositional stage. The stages of the alluvium formation were recorded in the changes of the granulometric and petrographical composition of the alluvium, and of the roundness of the coarse-grained clasts. The transition between these two alluvial beds is outlined by the voluminous intercalations of the sand lenses, and also by a change in the colour of the alluvial deposits. Granulometric composition of the alluvium of the channel facies, in general, changes little in the section. Only in the transition zone from the lower to the upper part of the alluvial deposits, there is a sharp, abrupt increase in the content of gravels and a sharp reduction in the content of boulders. Generally, in the composition of the alluvium two dominant and two subordinate components are clearly identified. The pebble grains and the sandy-clay matrix are the dominant components, whereas the gravel grains and the boulders are less common. Petrographic composition of the coarse-grained fraction of the terrace alluvium proved to be the richest of all the so far investigated sections of the high (situated over the canyon) terraces of the Dnister River (at Kunysivtsi, Ivane-Puste, Repuzhyntsi, and Lysychnyky). The pebbles 40–100 mm in diameter show particularly diverse petrographic composition which includes fragments of nine types of rocks: the four of the Carpathian provenance (sandstone, aleurite, cherts, and quartzite), and the five of the Podillian provenance (red-coloured Devonian sandstone, Albian cherts and sandstone, and lithothamnian and cryptocrystalline chemogenic limestone). More precisely, the richest is the lower part of the alluvial deposits where the fragments of all the nine rock types occur. The upper part of the alluvium is markedly poorer because only the five rock types occur there. Diversity of the petrographic composition of the alluvium decreased by reducing the local Podillian types of rocks, which are represented only by the red-coloured Devonian sandstones. The composition of the Carpathian types of rocks remained unchanged. The detected changes in the granulometric and petrographic composition of the alluvium of the investigated terrace permitted to show that the principal providers of the local (Podillian) debris of rocks was played by the Podillian tributaries of the Dnister River. The Dnister alone transported mainly the Carpathian material and only the small volume of Podillian rocks represented by the debris of the red-coloured Devonian sandstones. It was also found that the accumulation of the alluvial deposits of the Susidovychi terrace in the Kulakivtsi section took place in the conditions of restructuring of the Dnister palaeodrainage system. In the initial stages of this terrace formation, the palaeo-Dnister was directed from the village Dobryvliany further north than today, and it entered into the present-day Tupa River valley at environs of the village Bedrykivtsi. In the vicinity of the village Bedrykivtsi, the palaeo-Dnister was turning sharply eastward and proceeded along the present-day river valleys of Tupa and Seret. In the later stages of the Susidovychi terrace formation, the palaeo-Dnister left the portion of its valley stretching between the villages Bedrykivtsi and Schytivtsi, and it shifted several hundred meters to the south and has stopped practically within its current canyon valley. The desolate portion of its palaeo-valley located between the villages Bedrykivtsy and Kasperivtsi has been inherited by the Tupa River and the lower portion of this palaeo-valley located between the villages Kasperivtsi and Schytivtsi – by the Seret River. Key words: palaeo-Dnister, over the canyon terraces, Susidovychi terrace, alluvium, granulometric composition, petrographical composition, roundness, Carpathian material, Podillian material.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 54-61
Author(s):  
Девятова ◽  
Tat'yana Devyatova ◽  
Алаева ◽  
Liliya Alaeva ◽  
Аносова ◽  
...  

We studied morphological features of the structure of the profile of forest soils, their structural-aggregate composition, chemical, physical and chemical properties using standard methods. The differ-ences in the studied parameters depending on the position in the relief are defined. Research are pre-sented, which has high scientific and practical significance for studying the conditions of growth, spatial distribution, productivity, features of functioning of natural forest ecosystems and improving and detailing taxonomic position of soils of gulley and ravine complex.


KURVATEK ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 111-116
Author(s):  
Sri Ning Peni ◽  
. . T. Listyani R.A.

 Groundwater in the Banjararum area is found in various rocks that build  the West Progo Hills, including the Nanggulan and the Andesite Breccia Formations. Groundwater can be found in dug wells and springs. Field surveys show that the groundwater is generally clear, tasteless and odorless, except for the well at Ngipikrejo. Chemical test results from four samples showed that groundwater in limestone has Ca, Mg - HCO3 type, whereas in volcanic rocks of type Ca - HCO3 and Ca, Na - HCO3. Groundwater chemistry type is generated from the soil, mineral dissolution in sedimentary rocks and igneous rocks as well as the atmosphere through rainwater. The considerable content of NO3 in the Ngipikrejo area indicates pollution from human activities, plants or animal dung. In general, groundwater in the study area is suitable for use as clean water or drinking water, characterized by a measurable pH in the field of 6.6 - 7.2 and TDS 54 - 155 ppm. Nevertheless, laboratory test results show that groundwater samples are water-filled, with a hardness of 135,866 - 778,048 (moderately hard - very hard), so special treatment is required before drinking.


2013 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ram Prasad Sharma

This study was conducted in Kankali (Chitwan) and Tibrekot (Kaski) Community Forests to explore the status of soil nutrients and its relation with rock types and physical and chemical properties of soils. The soil sample data collected from the community forests were analyzed for soil texture, soil pH, soil organic matter (SOM), N, P, K, Zn and boron using reliable equipment and standard methods. The data are interpreted by applying descriptive statistics. The inter-relationship between soil nutrients is presented at 99% and 95% confidence levels. N, P, Zn and B show direct and indirect relation with soil texture. K, Zn and B show both positive and negative correlation with soil pH. SOM also show direct and indirect relation with NPK and Zn. The relations of soil texture, SOM, soil pH, N, P, K, Zn and B with rocks are interpreted using nutrient element content in minerals of studied rocks. This paper presents clear and consistent evidences of the role of soil nutrients in shaping the vegetation growth pattern and their distribution in the middle Mountain and Siwalik physiographic regions of Nepal.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huifei Tao ◽  
Lewei Hao ◽  
Shutong Li ◽  
Tao Wu ◽  
Zhen Qin ◽  
...  

The provenance study of the sediments from Qinghai Lake is of great significance for the understanding of geological and climatic evolution processes of the Tibet Plateau on the one hand and for evaluating the controlling factors of the sediment components on the other hand. The samples were collected from five rivers, foreshore, beach, beach bar, and aeolian sand dune in the Qinghai Lake. The bulk geochemical composition, petrography, and mineralogy features of the samples are analyzed. The results show that: 1) Qinghai Lake sediments experienced low-intensity chemical weathering from the source areas to the deposition sites and were affected by some recycled detrital materials and 2) the source rocks for the sediments include felsic rocks (granite, granodiorite, and felsic volcanic rocks), carbonate, metamorphic rocks (marble and meta-volcanic rocks), and clastic rocks with the felsic source rocks to have the most important impact on the chemical compositions of the sediments. The geochemical indicator of Al2O3/TiO2 reflects that the provenance of fine-grained sediments from the center of Qinghai Lake is more mafic than the coarse-grained sediments from the margin of the Qinghai Lake, suggesting that the hydraulic sorting of grain size probably plays an important role in the geochemical compositions of the sediments. The mafic elements were probably preferentially enriched in muds.


2017 ◽  
Vol 54 (7) ◽  
pp. 798-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Calvert ◽  
Nathan Hayward ◽  
Rajesh Vayavur ◽  
Maurice Colpron

In 2004, two seismic reflection lines were shot across the Mesozoic Whitehorse trough and adjacent terranes. Three-dimensional first-arrival tomographic inversion is used to constrain lithology to 800–1200 m depth, and surface structures are extrapolated into the middle crust using the coincident reflection data. In the Yukon–Tanana terrane, the metasedimentary Snowcap assemblage is characterized by velocities of 4.5–5.5 km/s, while in Quesnellia, velocities of 5.0–6.0 km/s occur at 500 m depth, and probably represent igneous rocks of the Tatchun batholith. Across the Whitehorse trough, velocities >4.0 km/s correspond to clastic rocks of the Jurassic Laberge and Triassic Lewes River groups; velocities <4.0 km/s probably present the clastic Jurassic to Cretaceous Tantalus Formation. Several near-surface units with velocities of 2.0–3.0 km/s are identified; some correlate well with volcanic rocks of the Upper Cretaceous Carmacks Group, but others could be attributable to alluvial deposits or faulting. The Big Salmon fault is interpreted to dip southwest, implying that rocks of the Yukon–Tanana terrane extend beneath Quesnellia. Stikinia and Quesnellia underlie up to 5–8 km of Triassic to Early Cretaceous sedimentary strata, and appear to be a single allochthon within an 18–20 km deep synform above the Yukon–Tanana terrane, which we name the Northern Intermontane synform. In general, reflection geometries in the upper crust are complex, but are consistent with large-scale imbricate structures that have been dissected into numerous blocks by displacement along moderately to steeply dipping strike-slip faults, which may be part of a crustal-scale flower structure extending to the base of the crust.


1966 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 101-110
Author(s):  
W. Iwanowska

In connection with the spectrophotometric study of population-type characteristics of various kinds of stars, a statistical analysis of kinematical and distribution parameters of the same stars is performed at the Toruń Observatory. This has a twofold purpose: first, to provide a practical guide in selecting stars for observing programmes, second, to contribute to the understanding of relations existing between the physical and chemical properties of stars and their kinematics and distribution in the Galaxy.


Author(s):  
Sydney S. Breese ◽  
Howard L. Bachrach

Continuing studies on the physical and chemical properties of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) have included electron microscopy of RNA strands released when highly purified virus (1) was dialyzed against demlneralized distilled water. The RNA strands were dried on formvar-carbon coated electron microscope screens pretreated with 0.1% bovine plasma albumin in distilled water. At this low salt concentration the RNA strands were extended and were stained with 1% phosphotungstic acid. Random dispersions of strands were recorded on electron micrographs, enlarged to 30,000 or 40,000 X and the lengths measured with a map-measuring wheel. Figure 1 is a typical micrograph and Fig. 2 shows the distributions of strand lengths for the three major types of FMDV (A119 of 6/9/72; C3-Rezende of 1/5/73; and O1-Brugge of 8/24/73.


Author(s):  
Mehmet Sarikaya ◽  
Ilhan A. Aksay

Biomimetics involves investigation of structure, function, and methods of synthesis of biological composite materials. The goal is to apply this information to the design and synthesis of materials for engineering applications.Properties of engineering materials are structure sensitive through the whole spectrum of dimensions from nanometer to macro scale. The goal in designing and processing of technological materials, therefore, is to control microstructural evolution at each of these dimensions so as to achieve predictable physical and chemical properties. Control at each successive level of dimension, however, is a major challenge as is the retention of integrity between successive levels. Engineering materials are rarely fabricated to achieve more than a few of the desired properties and the synthesis techniques usually involve high temperature or low pressure conditions that are energy inefficient and environmentally damaging.In contrast to human-made materials, organisms synthesize composites whose intricate structures are more controlled at each scale and hierarchical order.


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