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Rock weathering on the eastern mountains of southern Africa: Review and insights from case studies
Affiliation:1. Department of Cardiology, University Medical Center Ljubljana, Zaloska cesta 2, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia;2. Institute of Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Korytkova cesta 2, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia;3. Department of Pulmonary diseases, University Medical Center Ljubljana, Zaloska cesta 2, 1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia;4. Faculty of Medicine, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia;1. Hoshinooka Cardiovascular Clinic, Japan;2. Department of Internal Medicine, Yoshino Hospital, Japan;3. Division of Cardiology, Department of Integrated Medicine and Informatics, Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan;4. Department of Radiology, Ehime University Graduate School of Medicine, Japan;5. Division of Cardiology, Uwajima City Hospital, Japan
Abstract:The mountains in the eastern region of southern Africa are of significant regional importance, providing for a diverse range of land use including conservation, tourism and subsistence agriculture. The higher regions are comprised of flood basalts and are immediately underlain by predominantly aeolian-origin sandstones. Our understanding of the weathering of these basalts and sandstones is reviewed here, with particular focus on the insights gained from the Lesotho Highlands Water Project and an ongoing study into the deterioration of rock art. While the chemical weathering attributes of the basalts have been substantially investigated, it is evident that the environmental surface conditions of rock moisture and temperature, as affecting weathering processes, remain largely unknown. Within the sandstones, studies pertaining to rock art deterioration present insights into the potential surface weathering processes and highlight the need for detailed field monitoring. Outside of these site-specific studies, however, little is understood of how weathering impacts on landscape development; notably absent, are detail on weathering rates, and potential effects of biological weathering. Some palaeoenvironmental inferences have also been made from weathering products, both within the basalts and the sandstones, but aspects of these remain controversial and further detailed research can still be undertaken.
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