INVESTIGADORES
BAEZ Walter Ariel
artículos
Título:
Sandstone weathering processes in the painted rock shelters of Cerro Colorado (Córdoba, Argentina)
Autor/es:
PEÑA-MONNÉ, JOSÉ LUIS; SAMPIETRO-VATTUONE, MARÍA M.; BÁEZ, WALTER ARIEL; GARCÍA-GIMÉNEZ, ROSARIO; STÁBILE, FRANCO MATÍAS; MARTÍNEZ STAGNARO, SUSANA Y.; TISSERA, LUIS E.
Revista:
GEOARCHAEOLOGY-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
Editorial:
JOHN WILEY & SONS INC
Referencias:
Año: 2022 vol. 37 p. 332 - 349
ISSN:
0883-6353
Resumen:
Tafoni, produced by physicochemical weathering of sandstones, are abundant in the Cerro Colorado (Córdoba province, Argentina). Many of the rock shelters are decorated with rock art of high heritage significance. This art belongs to semisedentary communities from the Late Prehispanic Period (ca. 1550?350 AP). They include morphologies inherited from more humid ancient climates combined with current weathering processes. Evolutionary relief study established that tafoni formation is a product of inherited past wetter climates. Mineralogical and petrographic analyses were performed on samples collected from the sandstones and from various morphologies, weathering residues, and wall and ceiling concretions at four rock shelters, Cueva del Indio, Ricci, Quitilipi, and La Trampa. Gypsum and other salts that are not part of the unaltered rock but the result of weathering reveal the magnitude of hydroclastic and haloclastic processes. These activities form active granular disintegration, flaking, and spalling, and impinge on some painted panels. Mapping the distribution of weathering features and processes at each rock shelter enables the planning of interventions to mitigate and alleviate the effects caused by infiltration of water through rock discontinuities, fractures, and overhangs. It also allows decreasing the accumulation of dust and minimizing muddy water flowing over the paintings. These actions are aimed at retarding the progression of rock art degradation and the visible loss of some paintings.