Abstract
The Cave of Giant Crystals of Naica (Chihuahua, Mexico) is a world geological treasure worth to be preserved. These crystals of up to 12 m in length are made of selenite, the macrocrystalline variety of gypsum (CaSO4·2H2O). They have grown for thousands of years until the cave was dried, which allowed the cave and the crystals to be accessible, but exposed their surfaces in contact with air. Gypsum crystals are fragile because of their trend to dehydrate, the possible replacement to CaCO3 upon reactions with atmospheric CO2 as well as their intrinsic mechanical properties. Several laboratory experiments, designed to study the deterioration of selenite crystals under different artificial atmospheric conditions, are presented. Four atmospheric compositions rich in CO2, CH4, NOx, and air were tested for 1 year at temperatures of 25 and 60 °C and in either liquid or gaseous environments. The surface evolution was monitored by optical microscopy, infrared spectrometry, and grazing incidence X-ray diffraction w...
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