Laterites are soil types rich in iron and aluminium, formed in hot and wet tropical areas. Nearly all laterites are rusty-red because of iron oxides. They develop by intensive and long-lasting weathering of the underlying parent rock. Tropical weathering (laterization) is a prolonged process of chemical weathering which produces a wide variety in the thickness, grade, chemistry and ore mineralogy of the resulting soils. The majority of the land areas with laterites was or is between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn.
Historically, laterite was cut into brick-like shapes and used in monument building. After 1000 CE construction at Angkor Wat and other southeast Asian sites changed to rectangular temple enclosures made of laterite, brick and stone. Since the mid-1970s trial sections of bituminous-surfaced low-volume roads have used laterite in place of stone as a base course. Thick laterite layers are porous and slightly permeable, so the layers can function as aquifers in rural areas. Locally available laterites are used in an acid solution, followed by precipitation to remove phosphorus and heavy metals at sewage treatment facilities.
Laterites are a source of aluminium ore; the ore exists largely in clay minerals and the hydroxides, gibbsite, boehmite, and diaspore, which resembles the composition of bauxite. In Northern Ireland they once provided a major source of iron and aluminium ores. Laterite ores also were the early major source of nickel.
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Francis Buchanan-Hamilton first described and named a laterite formation in southern India in 1807.[1]:65 He named it laterite from the Latin word later, which means a brick; this rock can easily be cut into brick-shaped blocks for building.[1]:65 The word laterite has been used for variably cemented, sesquioxide-rich soil horizons.[2] A sesquioxide is an oxide with three atoms of oxygen and two metal atoms. It has also been used for any reddish soil at or near the Earth's surface.[2]
Laterite is a surface formation rich in iron and aluminium, formed in hot and wet tropical areas. It develops by intensive and long-lasting weathering of the underlying parent rock. Nearly all laterites are rusty-red because of iron oxides. Laterite covers are thick on the stable areas of the African Shield, the South American Shield and the Australian Shield.[3]:1 In Madhya Pradesh, India, the laterite which caps the plateau is 30 m (100 ft) thick.[4]:554 Laterites can be either soft and easily broken into smaller pieces, or firm and physically resistant. Basement rocks are buried under the thick weathered layer and rarely exposed.[3]:1 Lateritic soils form the uppermost part of the laterite cover.
Tropical weathering (laterization) is a prolonged process of chemical weathering which produces a wide variety in the thickness, grade, chemistry and ore mineralogy of the resulting soils.[5]:3 The initial products of weathering are essentially kaolinized rocks called saprolites.[6] A period of active laterization extended from about the mid-Tertiary to the mid-Quaternary periods (35 to 1.5 million years ago).[5]:3 Statistical analyses show that the transition in the mean and variance levels of 18O during the middle of the Pleistocene was abrupt.[7] It seems this abrupt change was global and mainly represents an increase in ice mass; at about the same time an abrupt decrease in sea surface temperatures occurred; these two changes indicate a sudden global cooling.[7] The rate of laterization would have decreased with the abrupt cooling of the earth. Weathering in tropical climates continues to this day, at a reduced rate.[5]:3
Laterites are formed from the leaching of parent sedimentary rocks (sandstones, clays, limestones); metamorphic rocks (schists, gneisses, migmatites); igneous rocks (granites, basalts, gabbros, peridotites); and mineralized proto-ores;[3]:5 which leaves the more insoluble ions, predominantly iron and aluminium. The mechanism of leaching involves acid dissolving the host mineral lattice, followed by hydrolysis and precipitation of insoluble oxides and sulfates of iron, aluminium and silica under the high temperature conditions[8] of a humid sub-tropical monsoon climate.[9] An essential feature for the formation of laterite is the repetition of wet and dry seasons.[10] Rocks are leached by percolating rain water during the wet season; the resulting solution containing the leached ions is brought to the surface by capillary action during the dry season.[10] These ions form soluble salt compounds which dry on the surface; these salts are washed away during the next wet season.[10] Laterite formation is favoured in low topographical reliefs of gentle crests and plateaus which prevents erosion of the surface cover.[5]:4 The reaction zone where rocks are in contact with water – from the lowest to highest water table levels – is progressively depleted of the easily leached ions of sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium.[10] A solution of these ions can have the correct pH to preferentially dissolve silicon oxide rather than the aluminium oxides and iron oxides.[10]
The mineralogical and chemical compositions of laterites are dependant on their parent rocks.[3]:6 Laterites consist mainly of quartz and oxides of titanium, zircon, iron, tin, aluminium and manganese, which remain during the course of weathering.[3]:7 Quartz is the most abundant relic mineral from the parent rock.[3]:7 Laterites vary significantly according to their location, climate and depth.[8] The main host minerals for nickel and cobalt can be either iron oxides, clay minerals or manganese oxides.[8] Iron oxides are derived from mafic igneous rocks and other iron-rich rocks; bauxites are derived from granitic igneous rock and other iron-poor rocks.[10] Nickel laterites occur in zones of the earth which experienced prolonged tropical weathering of ultramafic rocks containing the ferro-magnesian minerals olivine, pyroxene, and amphibole.[5]:3
Yves Tardy, from the French Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, calculated that laterites cover about one-third of the Earth's continental land area.[3]:1 Lateritic soils are the subsoils of the equatorial forests, of the savannas of the humid tropical regions, and of the Sahelian steppes.[3]:1 They cover most of the land area between the tropics of Cancer and Capricorn; areas not covered within these latitudes include the extreme western portion of South America, the southwestern portion of Africa, the desert regions of north-central Africa, the Arabian peninsula and the interior of Australia.[3]:2
Some of the oldest and most highly deformed ultramafic rocks which underwent laterization are found in the complex Precambrian shields in Brazil and Australia.[5]:3 Smaller highly deformed Alpine-type intrusives have formed laterite profiles in Guatemala, Columbia, Central Europe, India and Burma.[5]:3 Large thrust sheets of Mesozoic to Tertiary 251- to 65-million-year-old island arcs and continental collision zones underwent laterization in New Caledonia, Cuba, Indonesia and the Philippines.[5]:3 Laterites reflect past weathering conditions;[2] laterites which are found in present-day non-tropical areas are products of former geological epochs, when that area was near the equator. Present-day laterite occurring outside the humid tropics are considered to be indicators of climatic change, continental drift or a combination of both.[11]
When moist, laterites can be easily cut with a spade into regular-sized blocks.[3]:1 Laterite is mined while it is below the water table, so it is wet and soft.[12] Upon exposure to air it gradually hardens as the moisture between the flat clay particles evaporates and the larger iron salts[10] lock into a rigid lattice structure[12]:158 and become resistant to atmospheric conditions.[3]:1 The art of quarrying laterite material into masonry is suspected to have been introduced from the Indian subcontinent.[13]
After 1000 CE Angkorian construction changed from circular or irregular earthen walls to rectangular temple enclosures of laterite, brick and stone structures.[14]:3 Geographic surveys show areas which have laterite stone alignments which may be foundations of temple sites that have not survived.[14]:4 The Khmer people constructed the Angkor monuments – which are widely distributed in Cambodia and Thailand – between the 9th and 13th centuries.[15]:209 The stone materials used were sandstone and laterite; brick had been used in monuments constructed in the 9th and 10th centuries.[15]:210 Two types of laterite can be identified; both types consist of the minerals kaolinite, quartz, hematite and goethite.[15]:211 Differences in the amounts of minor elements arsenic, antimony, vanadium and strontium were measured between the two laterites.[15]:211
Angkor Wat – located in present-day Cambodia – is the largest religious structure built by Suryavarman II, who ruled the Khmer Empire from 1112 to 1152.[16]:39 It is a World Heritage site.[16]:39 The sandstone used for the building of Angkor Wat is Mesozoic sandstone quarried in the Phnom Kulen Mountains, about 40 km (25 mi) away from the temple.[17] The foundations and internal parts of the temple contain laterite blocks behind the sandstone surface.[17] The masonry was laid without joint mortar.[17]
The French surfaced roads in the Cambodia, Thailand and Viet Nam area with crushed laterite, stone or gravel.[18] Kenya, during the mid-1970s, and Malawi, during the mid-1980s, constructed trial sections of bituminous-surfaced low-volume roads using laterite in place of stone as a base course.[19] The laterite did not conform with any accepted specifications but performed equally well when compared with adjoining sections of road using stone or other stabilized material as a base.[19] In 1984 US$40,000 per 1 km (0.62 mi) was saved in Malawi by using laterite in this way.[19]
Bedrock in tropical zones is often granite, gneiss, schist or sandstone; the thick laterite layer is porous and slightly permeable so the layer can function as an aquifer in rural areas.[3]:2 One example is the Southwestern Laterite (Cabook) Aquifer in Sri Lanka.[20]:1 This aquifer is on the southwest border of Sri Lanka, with the narrow Shallow Aquifers on Coastal Sands between it and the ocean.[20]:4 It has considerable water-holding capacity, depending on the depth of the formation.[20]:1 The aquifer in this laterite recharges rapidly with the rains of April–May which follow the dry season of February–March, and continues to fill with the monsoon rains.[20]:10 The water table recedes slowly and is recharged several times during the rest of the year.[20]:13 In some high-density suburban areas the water table could recede to 15 m (50 ft) below ground level during a prolonged dry period of more than 65 days.[20]:13 The Cabook Aquifer laterites support relatively shallow aquifers that are accessible to dug wells.[20]:10
In Northern Ireland phosphorus enrichment of lakes due to agriculture is a significant problem.[21] Locally available laterite – a low-grade bauxite rich in iron and aluminium – is used in acid solution, followed by precipitation to remove phosphorus and heavy metals at several sewage treatment facilities.[21] Calcium-, iron- and aluminium-rich solid media are recommended for phosphorus removal.[21] A study, using both laboratory tests and pilot-scale constructed wetlands, reports the effectiveness of granular laterite in removing phosphorus and heavy metals from landfill leachate.[21] Initial laboratory studies show that laterite is capable of 99% removal of phosphorus from solution.[21] A pilot-scale experimental facility containing laterite achieved 96% removal of phosphorus.[21] This removal is greater than reported in other systems.[21] Initial removals of aluminium and iron by pilot-scale facilities have been up to 85% and 98% respectively.[21] Percolating columns of laterite removed enough cadmium, chromium and lead to undetectable concentrations.[21] There is a possible application of this low-cost, low-technology, visually unobtrusive, efficient system for rural areas with dispersed point sources of pollution.[21]
Ores are concentrated in metalliferous laterites; aluminium is found in bauxites, iron and manganese are found in iron-rich hard crusts, nickel and copper are found in disintegrated rocks, and gold is found in mottled clays.[3]:2
Bauxite ore is the main source for aluminium.[1]:65 Bauxite is a variety of laterite (residual sedimentary rock), so it has no precise chemical formula.[22] It is composed mainly of hydrated alumina minerals such as gibbsite [Al(OH)3 or Al2O3 . 3H2O)] in newer tropical deposits; in older subtropical, temperate deposits the major minerals are boehmite [γ-AlO(OH) or Al2O3.H2O] and some diaspore [α-AlO(OH) or Al2O3.H2O].[22] The average chemical composition of bauxite, by weight, is 45 to 60% Al2O3 and 20 to 30% Fe2O3.[22] The remaining weight consists of silicas (quartz, chalcedony and kaolinite), carbonates (calcite, magnesite and dolomite), titanium dioxide and water.[22] Bauxites of economical interest must be low in kaolinite.[6] Formation of lateritic bauxites occurs world-wide in the 145- to 2-million-year-old Cretaceous and Tertiary coastal plains.[23] The bauxites form elongate belts, sometimes hundreds of kilometers long, parallel to Lower Tertiary shorelines in India and South America; their distribution is not related to a particular mineralogical composition of the parent rock.[23] Many high-level bauxites are formed in coastal plains which were subsequently uplifted to their present altitude.[23]
The basaltic laterites of Northern Ireland were formed by extensive chemical weathering of basalts during a period of volcanic activity.[9] They reach a maximum thickness of 30 m (100 ft) and once provided a major source of iron and aluminium ore.[9] Percolating waters caused degradation of the parent basalt and preferential precipitation by acidic water through the lattice left the iron and aluminium ores.[9] Primary olivine, plagioclase feldspar and augite were successively broken down and replaced by a mineral assemblage consisting of hematite, gibbsite, goethite, anatase, halloysite and kaolinite.[9]
Laterite ores were the major source of early nickel.[5]:1 Rich laterite deposits in New Caledonia were mined starting the end of the 19th century to produce white metal.[5]:1 The discovery of sulfide deposits of Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, during the early part of the 20th century shifted the focus to sulfides for nickel extraction.[5]:1 About 70% of the Earth's land-based nickel resources are contained in laterites; they currently account for about 40% of the world nickel production.[5]:1 In 1950 laterite-source nickel was less than 10% of total production, in 2003 it accounted for 42%, and by 2012 the share of laterite-source nickel is expected to be 51%.[5]:1 The four main areas in the world with the largest nickel laterite resources are New Caledonia, with 21%; Australia, with 20%; the Philippines, with 17%; and Indonesia, with 12%.[5]:4