2007 GSA Denver Annual Meeting (28–31 October 2007)

Paper No. 10
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM

WHY A LARGE NUMBER OF LANDSLIDES OCCUR IN THE PELITIC SCHIST? – ITS WEATHERING MECHANISMS AND THE INCIPIENT STAGE OF LANDSLIDE


YAMASAKI, Shintaro, Division of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, Gokasho, Uji, Kyoto, 611-0011, Japan and CHIGIRA, Masahiro, Geo-Disaster Division, Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University, Gokasho, Uji, Kyoto, 611-0011, Japan, yamasakis@slope.dpri.kyoto-u.ac.jp

We investigated mechanisms of weathering of pelitic schist, on which numerous number of landslides have occurred, by using undisturbed drilled core samples from two landslide sites of the Sambagawa Metamorphic Belt in Japan. Physical, chemical, and mineralogical analyses of the drilled cores clarified that the chemical weathering of pelitic schist is characterized by the oxidation of pyrite and graphite, which are commonly contained in pelitic schist, by the infiltrated oxidizing surface water. Oxidizing surface water reaches to the oxidation front, where chlorite is altered to Al-vermiculate, carbon and pyrite are oxidized and depleted, and goethite precipitates. The oxidation of pyrite also occurs just below the oxidation front probably by ferric iron without the precipitation of goethite. The oxidation of pyrite yields sulfuric acid, which percolates further downward, interacts with rocks, and weakens the rocks. In addition to this chemical weakening, stress release and shearing along schistosities form an incipient shear zone, which propagates to a sliding zone of a well-defined landslide. At the incipient stage, shearing along schistosities likely to occur along a graphite-rich layer, which is a typical solid lubricant. Then, deformation and pulverization of rock would proceed to form a fracture zone, which is a sliding zone. Once the sliding zone has developed, it would be impermeable and hence prohibits downflow of groundwater across it. Weathering, therefore, slows down until this filtration barrier is broken by the movement of the landslide. Pyrite and graphite have thus important roles in weathering and also in shear deformation, hence might determine the location of first shearing at an incipient stage of landslide. In addition, pyrite and graphite are generally closely associated in pelitic schist; original pyrite, which is framboidal pyrite, occurs in association with organic materials in muddy sediments.