Skip to main content
CASP Visit CASP website

Main

  • About Us
    • How We Can Help
    • A Bit of History
    • Our Status
    • People
    • Jobs
    • SEM Facility
    • Contact Us
    • News
    • Preventing Harm in Research and Innovation
  • Products
    • Geological Carbon Storage Research
    • Regional Research
    • Reports
    • Data Packages
    • Geological Collections and Data
  • Charity and Education
    • Publications
    • Meetings
    • The Robert Scott Research Fund
    • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • Outreach
  • Interactive Map
    • Arctic Region
    • China Region
    • East Africa Region
    • North Africa and Middle East Region
    • North Atlantic Region
    • Russia Region
    • South Atlantic Region
    • Southeast Europe to West Central Asia Region
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Rapid facies changes in Holocene fissure ridge hot spring travertines, Rapolano Terme, Italy

Rapid facies changes in Holocene fissure ridge hot spring travertines, Rapolano Terme, Italy

Holocene hot water travertine continues to form at Terme San Giovanni, near Rapolano Terme, central Italy, although artificial diversion of the water has reduced deposition. Mesothermal water (≈38–39 °C) emerging from fault-controlled vents located on a hilltop has created a linear fissure ridge 240 m long and up to 10 m high. Active parts of the ridge crest are covered by small cones; inactive parts are locally neotectonically fissured and have small pools. Ridge deposits include crystalline crust, paper-thin raft and shrub lithotypes. The ridge has both smooth and terraced marginal slopes, dominated by crystalline crusts with small shrubs in terrace pools. At the base of the ridge, there is a rapid transition to lateral flats and depressions, where water from the ridge collects and deposits shrub, irregular pisoid, reed, paper-thin raft and fine-grained and organic-rich travertines. Water channelled to nearby valley sides deposits thick crystalline crusts on valley slopes and waterfall overhangs, locally with small pools filled by smooth spherical pisoids. On the valley floor, mixing of waters forms varied stream-fill deposits that include micritic reed, paper-thin raft and coated bubble travertines. The diversity of travertine facies observed results from the location of the Terme San Giovanni hot springs on a hill crest, thus providing a wide array of downslope locations for further deposition. The abrupt facies transitions observed are characteristic of hot spring carbonates and result from a combination of rapid decrease in precipitation away from vents, variations in local surface topography and the feedback effect of travertine deposition itself, which dams and diverts water flow.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    Rapid facies changes in Holocene fissure ridge hot spring travertines, Rapolano Terme, Italy
  • Year

    1999
  • Author(s)

    Guo, L. and Riding, R.
  • Journal

    Sedimentology
  • Volume

    46
  • Issue

    6
  • Page(s)

    1145-1158
  • URL

    http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3091.1999.00269.x

Charity and Education

  • Publications
  • Meetings
  • The Robert Scott Research Fund
  • The Andrew Whitham CASP Fieldwork Awards
    • 2025 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2024 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2023 Fieldwork Award Winner
    • 2022 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2021 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2020 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2019 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2018 Fieldwork Award Winners
    • 2017 Fieldwork Award Winners
  • Outreach
  • © CASP A Not-For-Profit Organisation
  • Charity No. 298729
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn