¡Nos trasladamos! E-Prints cerrará el 7 de junio.

En las próximas semanas vamos a migrar nuestro repositorio a una nueva plataforma con muchas funcionalidades nuevas. En esta migración las fechas clave del proceso son las siguientes:

Es muy importante que cualquier depósito se realice en E-Prints Complutense antes del 7 de junio. En caso de urgencia para realizar un depósito, se puede comunicar a docta@ucm.es.

Characterization of monzogranitic batholiths as a supply source for heritage construction in the northwest of Madrid

Impacto

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year



Fort González, Rafael and Álvarez de Buergo, Mónica and Pérez-Monserrat, Elena Mercedes and Varas Muriel, María José (2010) Characterization of monzogranitic batholiths as a supply source for heritage construction in the northwest of Madrid. Engineering geology, 115 (3-4). pp. 149-157. ISSN 0013-7952

[thumbnail of 1-s2.0-S0013795209002439-main.pdf] PDF
Restringido a Repository staff only
Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives.

2MB

Official URL: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013795209002439



Abstract

The Church of the Assumption of Our Lady, in Valdemorillo (Madrid, Spain) is almost entirely built with granitoids. The studies and analyses were focused on the oldest part of the building (Ghosts Corner), which will be restored and rehabilitated in the near future. Homogeneous monzogranite is the predominant granitoid used in the Ghosts Corner, followed by granitic porphyry, porphyrytic monzogranite, gneiss and leucogranite. The original quarries that supplied homogeneous monzogranites for the first construction stages correspond to blocks present in the monument's surroundings. Quarries that supplied the granitic porphyries correspond to the dykes located to east–southeast of Valdemorillo, which are oriented N–S in relation to their intrusion direction. The combined use of ultrasonic velocity and Schmidt hammer techniques allowed, first, selection of the most representative blocks and ashlars for sampling. This reduced sampling to a minimum, but yielded representative results for the whole building. Second, the combined values were used to compare results for the building stones of the church to rocks from the surrounding quarries. Stones from the building showed lower ultrasonic and Schmidt hammer values, and higher porosity and water saturation values compared to the original quarry rocks. The anisotropy indices are directly related to the decay processes in the stone: spalling of homogeneous monzogranite and grain disintegration in granitic porphyries. Finally, the methods applied are inexpensive, easy to use and non-destructive techniques, very advisable properties when working with built heritage.


Item Type:Article
Uncontrolled Keywords:Granites; Stone heritage; Ultrasonic velocity; Schmidt hammer; Weathering; Provenance quarries
Subjects:Sciences > Geology > Petrology
ID Code:47932
Deposited On:06 Jun 2018 08:36
Last Modified:06 Jun 2018 10:23

Origin of downloads

Repository Staff Only: item control page