Volumetric changes in weathered profiles: iso-element mass balance method questioned by magnetic fabric

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A major issue in understanding weathering processes is to determine to what extent fabrics, structures and volumes from the parent rock are preserved through the weathering profile. Iso-element mass balance methods (IMB) are often used to estimate volume changes during progressive weathering, based on the assumption that a given element (either Ti, Zr or Th) is not mobile. The petrofabric of the weathered material is often characterized by a mimetic replacement of primary minerals that fully preserve the primary fabric. This suggests an isovolume weathering as volume change must be associated with shape change due to boundary conditions not allowing horizontal strains. So collapse or dilation should induce vertical compaction or constriction, respectively. The weak petrofabric of weathered materials may be precisely quantified using the anisotropy of low-field magnetic susceptibility technique (AMS). This paper reports, for the first time, a combined IMB and AMS study of two different environments: a complex lateritic sequence on Precambrian metamorphic rocks in Cameroon and a weathering profile on a Pleistocene basaltic flow in Morocco. The lateritic profile, divided into a lower saprolite zone (>12 m) and an upper nodular iron-rich unit (4 m), is characterized by neoformed magnetic minerals (goethite/hematite/spinels) and a weak but rather consistent magnetic fabric. Saprolitization, which induces low susceptibility values (50×10-9 m3/kg), preserves the linear tectonic fabric of the parent gneiss. AMS evidence for isovolumetric weathering agrees with Th based IMB, while Ti and Zr partly indicate apparent collapse and dilation (up to 50%), respectively. Ferralitization in the nodular iron crust, which enhances susceptibilities (500 to 700×10-9 m3/kg, due to spinel phases), induces drastic reductions in anisotropy due to multiple generation of neoformed minerals destroying primary fabric. However, a weak horizontal planar magnetic fabric suggests compaction, in agreement with Th and Ti based IMB while Zr would indicate isovolume weathering. Conversely, in the one meter thick weathering profile on basalt, the strong susceptibility (1.5 to 3×10-6 m3/kg) is dominated by inherited titanomaghemite grains which totally preserve the weak magmatic fabric of the fresh basalt. This again suggests that volume change is minor, while Ti and Zr based IMB indicate 20 to 50% of dilation. In both examples, large volume changes inferred from the IMB in units showing preserved primary AMS fabric appear unrealistic. Our AMS study, together with the large discrepancies between the IMB results produced by various elements, indicate that the assumption of immobility of a given element is probably not fulfilled all along these profiles. Isovolumetric weathering in the saprolitic zone may be more widespread than suggested by IMB results.

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