Conference Paper

Provenance Study of Gypsum Black Crusts

Volume: 24 November 30, 2023
  • Petros Karalis
  • Elissavet Dotsika
  • Dafni Kyropoulou
  • Alexandros Mazarakis-ainian
  • Evaggelia Kolofotia
  • Iakovos Raptis
  • Anastasios Drosou
  • Dimitrios Tzovaras
  • Anastasia Electra Poutouki
  • Giorgos Diamantopoulos
  • Panagiotis Leandros Poutoukis
EN

Provenance Study of Gypsum Black Crusts

Abstract

CaSO4- black crusts are the major cause of the deterioration of cultural heritage monuments. Gypsum black crusts are formed on marble or other carbonate rocks as a result of the reaction of atmospheric sulfur with the calcium of the stone causing erosion of its surface. Samples of CaSO4- crusts were collected by scraping off about 1 g of the layer of decayed carbonate rocks. A total of 18 samples from the archaeological site of Vryokastro at Kythnos island in Greece, were collected. These salts may have originated from different natural and anthropogenic sources. Understanding this deterioration process is crucial for the restoration/conservation of cultural heritage monuments. The natural sources include biological sources, construction materials, rainwater, marine spray, and pyrite oxidation within the rock substrate. Anthropogenic sources include pollution from fossil fuels. The oxygen and sulfur isotopes can help to discriminate the S-origin of black crusts. The isotopic analysis was conducted in the Stable Isotope Unit of the Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (NCSR Demokritos). For S isotope analyses, sulfate minerals were dissolved in deionized water and subsequently precipitated as BaSO4. Sulfur isotopic compositions were measured after the conversion of BaSΟ4 to SΟ2 using an elemental analyzer (Flash EA device) coupled with an isotope ratio mass spectrometer.

Keywords

References

  1. Dotsika, E., Kyropoulou, D., Christaras, V., & Diamantopoulos, G. (2018). δ13C and δ18Ο stable isotope analysis applied to detect technological variations and weathering processes of ancient lime and hydraulic mortars. Geosciences, 8(9), 339.
  2. Dotsika, E., Psomiadis,D., Poutoukis, D., Raco, B., & Gamaletsos, P. N.(2009). Isotopic analysis for degradation diagnosis of calcite matrix in mortar and plaster. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 395, 2227–2234.
  3. Dotsika, E., Lykoudis, S., & Poutoukis, D. (2010). Spatial distribution of the isotopic composition of precipitation and spring water in Greece. Global and Planetary Change, 71(3–4), 141–149.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Environmental and Sustainable Processes

Journal Section

Conference Paper

Authors

Petros Karalis This is me
Greece

Elissavet Dotsika This is me
Greece

Dafni Kyropoulou This is me
Greece

Alexandros Mazarakis-ainian This is me
Greece

Evaggelia Kolofotia This is me
Greece

Iakovos Raptis This is me
Greece

Anastasios Drosou This is me
Greece

Dimitrios Tzovaras This is me
Greece

Anastasia Electra Poutouki This is me
Italy

Giorgos Diamantopoulos This is me
Greece

Panagiotis Leandros Poutoukis This is me
Italy

Early Pub Date

December 18, 2023

Publication Date

November 30, 2023

Submission Date

May 16, 2023

Acceptance Date

September 24, 2023

Published in Issue

Year 2023 Volume: 24

APA
Karalis, P., Dotsika, E., Kyropoulou, D., Mazarakis-ainian, A., Kolofotia, E., Raptis, I., Drosou, A., Tzovaras, D., Poutouki, A. E., Diamantopoulos, G., & Poutoukis, P. L. (2023). Provenance Study of Gypsum Black Crusts. The Eurasia Proceedings of Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics, 24, 119-125. https://doi.org/10.55549/epstem.1406254