Abstract

An important process often cited in the development of saprock and saprolite is the isovolumetric weathering of granitic bedrock. Evidence for isovolumetric weathering includes the observation that the texture of the granitic protolith often remains recognizable in its weathered products. In contrast to the above often cited view, we present results from a study of two sites located on the 1.65Ga Boulder Creek Granodiorite near Boulder, Colorado, USA, in which weakly chemically altered saprock derived from tonalitic and granodioritic–tonalitic bedrock records volumetric strains on the order of 7.6%–8.5% and 7.9%–8.2% respectively. We show that dilation is likely due to the alteration of biotite to vermiculite during the early stages of weathering, and is associated with an expansion normal to the {001} cleavage of ~40%. Theoretical calculations of volumetric strains based on the modal biotite present in the protolith support such an interpretation.

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