The “seven-coloured earth” of Chamarel, Mauritius

The “seven-coloured earth” of Chamarel is a geological curiosity and a major tourist attraction of Mauritius. This is a small (∼7500 m 2) area of strikingly bare landscape showing well-developed rills and various shades of red, brown, grey, and purple. Curiously, it is located within a large, dense...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of African earth sciences (1994) 2010-04, Vol.57 (1), p.169-173
Hauptverfasser: Sheth, H.C., Johnson, C.P., Ollier, C.D.
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container_title Journal of African earth sciences (1994)
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creator Sheth, H.C.
Johnson, C.P.
Ollier, C.D.
description The “seven-coloured earth” of Chamarel is a geological curiosity and a major tourist attraction of Mauritius. This is a small (∼7500 m 2) area of strikingly bare landscape showing well-developed rills and various shades of red, brown, grey, and purple. Curiously, it is located within a large, dense forest. Prevalent misconceptions are that the landscape formed due to a volcanic eruption, or from volcanic ash. Whereas the bedrock is undoubtedly an old volcanic rock (basalt), the colours are due to weathering of the basalt and the formation of secondary iron oxides and hydroxides in it, and the rilling is a result of deforestation and sheet erosion, i.e., human modification of the landscape. Such features, inadequately described in the literature so far, also occur in Papua New Guinea, and may be common in tropical, high-rainfall regions with volcanic bedrock.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2009.07.009
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identifier ISSN: 1464-343X
ispartof Journal of African earth sciences (1994), 2010-04, Vol.57 (1), p.169-173
issn 1464-343X
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Basalt
Chamarel
Coloured earth
Mauritius
Rills
Weathering
title The “seven-coloured earth” of Chamarel, Mauritius
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