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Clay

Clay is a type of fine-grained natural soil material containing clay minerals[1] (hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates, e.g. kaolinite, Al2Si2O5(OH)4). Clays develop plasticity when wet but can be hardened through firing.[2][3][4] Most pure clay minerals are white or light-colored, but natural clays show a variety of colors from impurities, such as a reddish or brownish color from small amounts of iron oxide.[5][6]

Gay Head Cliffs in Martha's Vineyard consist almost entirely of clay.
A quaternary clay in Estonia

Clay is the oldest known ceramic material. Prehistoric humans discovered the useful properties of clay and used it for making pottery. Some of the earliest pottery shards have been dated to around 14,000 BC,[7] and clay tablets were the first known writing medium.[8] Clay is used in many modern industrial processes, such as paper making, cement production, and chemical filtering. Between one-half and two-thirds of the world's population live or work in buildings made with clay, often baked into brick, as an essential part of its load-bearing structure.

Clay is a very common substance. Shale, formed largely from clay, is the most common sedimentary rock.[9] Although many naturally occurring deposits include both silts and clay, clays are distinguished from other fine-grained soils by differences in size and mineralogy. Silts, which are fine-grained soils that do not include clay minerals, tend to have larger particle sizes than clays. Mixtures of sand, silt and less than 40% clay are called loam. Soils high in swelling clays (expansive clay), which are clay minerals that readily expand in volume when they absorb water, are a major challenge in civil engineering.[1]

Properties edit

 
A 23,500 times magnified electron micrograph of smectite clay

The defining mechanical property of clay is its plasticity when wet and its ability to harden when dried or fired. Clays show a broad range of water content within which they are highly plastic, from a minimum water content (called the plastic limit) where the clay is just moist enough to mould, to a maximum water content (called the liquid limit) where the moulded clay is just dry enough to hold its shape.[10] The plastic limit of kaolinite clay ranges from about 36% to 40% and its liquid limit ranges from about 58% to 72%.[11] High-quality clay is also tough, as measured by the amount of mechanical work required to roll a sample of clay flat. Its toughness reflects a high degree of internal cohesion.[10]

Clay has a high content of clay minerals that give it its plasticity. Clay minerals are hydrous aluminium phyllosilicate minerals, composed of aluminium and silicon ions bonded into tiny, thin plates by interconnecting oxygen and hydroxide ions. These plates are tough but flexible, and in moist clay, they adhere to each other. The resulting aggregates give clay the cohesion that makes it plastic.[12] In kaolinite clay, the bonding between plates is provided by a film of water molecules that hydrogen bond the plates together. The bonds are weak enough to allow the plates to slip past each other when the clay is being moulded, but strong enough to hold the plates in place and allow the moulded clay to retain its shape after it is moulded. When the clay is dried, most of the water molecules are removed, and the plates hydrogen bond directly to each other, so that the dried clay is rigid but still fragile. If the clay is moistened again, it will once more become plastic. When the clay is fired to the earthenware stage, a dehydration reaction removes additional water from the clay, causing clay plates to irreversibly adhere to each other via stronger covalent bonding, which strengthens the material. The clay mineral kaolinite is transformed into a non-clay material, metakaolin, which remains rigid and hard if moistened again. Further firing through the stoneware and porcelain stages further recrystallizes the metakaolin into yet stronger minerals such as mullite.[4]

The tiny size and plate form of clay particles gives clay minerals a high surface area. In some clay minerals, the plates carry a negative electrical charge that is balanced by a surrounding layer of positive ions (cations), such as sodium, potassium, or calcium. If the clay is mixed with a solution containing other cations, these can swap places with the cations in the layer around the clay particles, which gives clays a high capacity for ion exchange.[12] The chemistry of clay minerals, including their capacity to retain nutrient cations such as potassium and ammonium, is important to soil fertility.[13]

Clay is a common component of sedimentary rock. Shale is formed largely from clay and is the most common of sedimentary rocks.[9] However, most clay deposits are impure. Many naturally occurring deposits include both silts and clay. Clays are distinguished from other fine-grained soils by differences in size and mineralogy. Silts, which are fine-grained soils that do not include clay minerals, tend to have larger particle sizes than clays. There is, however, some overlap in particle size and other physical properties. The distinction between silt and clay varies by discipline. Geologists and soil scientists usually consider the separation to occur at a particle size of 2 μm (clays being finer than silts), sedimentologists often use 4–5 μm, and colloid chemists use 1 μm.[2] Geotechnical engineers distinguish between silts and clays based on the plasticity properties of the soil, as measured by the soils' Atterberg limits. ISO 14688 grades clay particles as being smaller than 2 μm and silt particles as being larger. Mixtures of sand, silt and less than 40% clay are called loam.

Some clay minerals (such as smectite) are described as swelling clay minerals, because they have a great capacity to take up water, and they increase greatly in volume when they do so. When dried, they shrink back to their original volume. This produces distinctive textures, such as mudcracks or "popcorn" texture, in clay deposits. Soils containing swelling clay minerals (such as bentonite) pose a considerable challenge for civil engineering, because swelling clay can break foundations of buildings and ruin road beds.[1]

Formation edit

 
Italian and African-American clay miners in mine shaft, 1910

Clay minerals most commonly form by prolonged chemical weathering of silicate-bearing rocks. They can also form locally from hydrothermal activity.[14] Chemical weathering takes place largely by acid hydrolysis due to low concentrations of carbonic acid, dissolved in rainwater or released by plant roots. The acid breaks bonds between aluminium and oxygen, releasing other metal ions and silica (as a gel of orthosilicic acid).)[15]

The clay minerals formed depend on the composition of the source rock and the climate. Acid weathering of feldspar-rich rock, such as granite, in warm climates tends to produce kaolin. Weathering of the same kind of rock under alkaline conditions produces illite. Smectite forms by weathering of igneous rock under alkaline conditions, while gibbsite forms by intense weathering of other clay minerals.[16]

There are two types of clay deposits: primary and secondary. Primary clays form as residual deposits in soil and remain at the site of formation. Secondary clays are clays that have been transported from their original location by water erosion and deposited in a new sedimentary deposit.[17] Secondary clay deposits are typically associated with very low energy depositional environments such as large lakes and marine basins.[14]

Varieties edit

The main groups of clays include kaolinite, montmorillonite-smectite, and illite. Chlorite, vermiculite,[18] talc, and pyrophyllite[19] are sometimes also classified as clay minerals. There are approximately 30 different types of "pure" clays in these categories, but most "natural" clay deposits are mixtures of these different types, along with other weathered minerals.[20] Clay minerals in clays are most easily identified using X-ray diffraction rather than chemical or physical tests.[21]

Varve (or varved clay) is clay with visible annual layers that are formed by seasonal deposition of those layers and are marked by differences in erosion and organic content. This type of deposit is common in former glacial lakes. When fine sediments are delivered into the calm waters of these glacial lake basins away from the shoreline, they settle to the lake bed. The resulting seasonal layering is preserved in an even distribution of clay sediment banding.[14]

Quick clay is a unique type of marine clay indigenous to the glaciated terrains of Norway, North America, Northern Ireland, and Sweden.[22] It is a highly sensitive clay, prone to liquefaction, and has been involved in several deadly landslides.[23]

Uses edit

 
Clay layers in a construction site in Auckland, New Zealand. Dry clay is normally much more stable than sand in excavations.
 
A 14th century bottle stopper made of fired clay

Modelling clay is used in art and handicraft for sculpting. Clays are used for making pottery, both utilitarian and decorative, and construction products, such as bricks, walls, and floor tiles. Different types of clay, when used with different minerals and firing conditions, are used to produce earthenware, stoneware, and porcelain. Prehistoric humans discovered the useful properties of clay. Some of the earliest pottery shards recovered are from central Honshu, Japan. They are associated with the Jōmon culture, and recovered deposits have been dated to around 14,000 BC.[7] Cooking pots, art objects, dishware, smoking pipes, and even musical instruments such as the ocarina can all be shaped from clay before being fired.

Ancient peoples in Mesopotamia adopted clay tablets as the first known writing medium.[8] Clay was chosen due to the local material being easy to work with and widely available.[24] Scribes wrote on the tablets by inscribing them with a script known as cuneiform, using a blunt reed called a stylus, which effectively produced the wedge shaped markings of their writing. After being written on, clay tablets could be reworked into fresh tablets and reused if needed, or fired to make them permanent records. Purpose-made clay balls were used as sling ammunition.[25] Clay is used in many industrial processes, such as paper making, cement production, and chemical filtering.[26] Bentonite clay is widely used as a mold binder in the manufacture of sand castings.[27][28]

Mass bathing in liquid clay
as a type of relaxation
  Video (10 minutes) on YouTube
 
Clay bath near lake Ahémé in Benin

Medicine edit

Traditional uses of clay as medicine goes back to prehistoric times. An example is Armenian bole, which is used to soothe an upset stomach. Some animals such as parrots and pigs ingest clay for similar reasons.[29] Kaolin clay and attapulgite have been used as anti-diarrheal medicines.[30]

Construction edit

 
A clay building in South Estonia

Clay as the defining ingredient of loam is one of the oldest building materials on Earth, among other ancient, naturally-occurring geologic materials such as stone and organic materials like wood.[31] Between one-half and two-thirds of the world's population, in both traditional societies as well as developed countries, still live or work in buildings made with clay, often baked into brick, as an essential part of its load-bearing structure.[citation needed] Also a primary ingredient in many natural building techniques, clay is used to create adobe, cob, cordwood, and structures and building elements such as wattle and daub, clay plaster, clay render case, clay floors and clay paints and ceramic building material. Clay was used as a mortar in brick chimneys and stone walls where protected from water.

Clay, relatively impermeable to water, is also used where natural seals are needed, such as in pond linings, the cores of dams, or as a barrier in landfills against toxic seepage (lining the landfill, preferably in combination with geotextiles).[32] Studies in the early 21st century have investigated clay's absorption capacities in various applications, such as the removal of heavy metals from waste water and air purification.[33][34]

See also edit

  • Argillaceous minerals – Fine-grained aluminium phyllosilicates
  • Industrial plasticine – Modeling material which is mainly used by automotive design studios
  • Clay animation – Stop-motion animation made using malleable clay models
  • Clay chemistry – The chemical structures, properties and reactions of clay minerals
  • Clay court – Type of tennis court
  • Clay panel – Building material made of clay with some additives
  • Clay pit – Open-pit mining for the extraction of clay minerals
  • Geophagia – Practice of eating earth or soil-like substrates such as clay or chalk
  • Graham Cairns-Smith – Scottish chemist known for his controversial book Seven Clues to the Origin of Life
  • London Clay – Low-permeable marine geological formation
  • Modelling clay – Any of a group of malleable substances used in building and sculpting
  • Paper clay – Clay with cellulose fiber
  • Particle size – Notion for comparing dimensions of particles in different states of matter
  • Plasticine – Brand of modeling clay
  • Vertisol – Clay-rich soil, prone to cracking
  • Clay–water interaction – Various progressive interactions between clay minerals and water

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Olive et al. 1989.
  2. ^ a b Guggenheim & Martin 1995, pp. 255–256.
  3. ^ Science Learning Hub 2010.
  4. ^ a b Breuer 2012.
  5. ^ Klein & Hurlbut 1993, pp. 512–514.
  6. ^ Nesse 2000, pp. 252–257.
  7. ^ a b Scarre 2005, p. 238.
  8. ^ a b Ebert 2011, p. 64.
  9. ^ a b Boggs 2006, p. 140.
  10. ^ a b Moreno-Maroto & Alonso-Azcárate 2018.
  11. ^ White 1949.
  12. ^ a b Bergaya, Theng & Lagaly 2006, pp. 1–18.
  13. ^ Hodges 2010.
  14. ^ a b c Foley 1999.
  15. ^ Leeder 2011, pp. 5–11.
  16. ^ Leeder 2011, pp. 10–11.
  17. ^ Murray 2002.
  18. ^ Nesse 2000, p. 253.
  19. ^ Klein & Hurlbut 1993, pp. 514–515.
  20. ^ Klein & Hurlbut 1993, p. 512.
  21. ^ Nesse 2000, p. 256.
  22. ^ Rankka et al. 2004.
  23. ^ Natural Resources Canada 2005.
  24. ^ . www.bl.uk. Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved 9 May 2023.
  25. ^ Forouzan et al. 2012.
  26. ^ Nesse 2000, p. 257.
  27. ^ Boylu 2011.
  28. ^ Eisenhour & Brown 2009.
  29. ^ Diamond 1999.
  30. ^ Dadu et al. 2015.
  31. ^ Grim 2016.
  32. ^ Koçkar, Akgün & Aktürk 2005.
  33. ^ García-Sanchez, Alvarez-Ayuso & Rodriguez-Martin 2002.
  34. ^ Churchman et al. 2006.

References edit

  • Clay mineral nomenclature American Mineralogist.
  • Bergaya, Faïza; Theng, B. K. G.; Lagaly, Gerhard (2006). Handbook of Clay Science. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-044183-2.
  • Boggs, Sam (2006). Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy (4th ed.). Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN 0131547283.
  • Boylu, Feridun (1 April 2011). "Optimization of foundry sand characteristics of soda-activated calcium bentonite". Applied Clay Science. 52 (1): 104–108. Bibcode:2011ApCS...52..104B. doi:10.1016/j.clay.2011.02.005.
  • Breuer, Stephen (July 2012). "The chemistry of pottery" (PDF). Education in Chemistry: 17–20. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  • Churchman, G. J.; Gates, W. P.; Theng, B. K. G.; Yuan, G. (2006). Faïza Bergaya, Benny K. G. Theng and Gerhard Lagaly (ed.). "Chapter 11.1 Clays and Clay Minerals for Pollution Control". Developments in Clay Science. Handbook of Clay Science. Elsevier. 1: 625–675. doi:10.1016/S1572-4352(05)01020-2. ISBN 9780080441832.
  • Dadu, Ramona; Hu, Mimi I.; Cleeland, Charles; Busaidy, Naifa L.; Habra, Mouhammed; Waguespack, Steven G.; Sherman, Steven I.; Ying, Anita; Fox, Patricia; Cabanillas, Maria E. (October 2015). "Efficacy of the Natural Clay, Calcium Aluminosilicate Anti-Diarrheal, in Reducing Medullary Thyroid Cancer–Related Diarrhea and Its Effects on Quality of Life: A Pilot Study". Thyroid. 25 (10): 1085–1090. doi:10.1089/thy.2015.0166. PMC 4589264. PMID 26200040.
  • Diamond, Jared M. (1999). "Diamond on Geophagy". ucla.edu. from the original on 28 May 2015.
  • Ebert, John David (31 August 2011). The New Media Invasion: Digital Technologies and the World They Unmake. McFarland. ISBN 9780786488186. from the original on 24 December 2017.
  • Ehlers, Ernest G. and Blatt, Harvey (1982). 'Petrology, Igneous, Sedimentary, and Metamorphic' San Francisco: W.H. Freeman and Company. ISBN 0-7167-1279-2.
  • Eisenhour, D. D.; Brown, R. K. (1 April 2009). "Bentonite and Its Impact on Modern Life". Elements. 5 (2): 83–88. Bibcode:2009Eleme...5...83E. doi:10.2113/gselements.5.2.83.
  • Foley, Nora K. (September 1999). "Environmental Characteristics of Clays and Clay Mineral Deposits". usgs.gov. from the original on 8 December 2008.
  • Forouzan, Firoozeh; Glover, Jeffrey B.; Williams, Frank; Deocampo, Daniel (1 December 2012). "Portable XRF analysis of zoomorphic figurines, "tokens," and sling bullets from Chogha Gavaneh, Iran". Journal of Archaeological Science. 39 (12): 3534–3541. Bibcode:2012JArSc..39.3534F. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2012.04.010.
  • García-Sanchez, A.; Alvarez-Ayuso, E.; Rodriguez-Martin, F. (1 March 2002). "Sorption of As(V) by some oxyhydroxides and clay minerals. Application to its immobilization in two polluted mining soils". Clay Minerals. 37 (1): 187–194. Bibcode:2002ClMin..37..187G. doi:10.1180/0009855023710027. S2CID 101864343.
  • Grim, Ralph (2016). "Clay mineral". Encyclopædia Britannica. from the original on 9 December 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  • Guggenheim, Stephen; Martin, R. T. (1995), "Definition of clay and clay mineral: Journal report of the AIPEA nomenclature and CMS nomenclature committees", Clays and Clay Minerals, 43 (2): 255–256, Bibcode:1995CCM....43..255G, doi:10.1346/CCMN.1995.0430213, S2CID 129312753
  • Hillier S. (2003) "Clay Mineralogy." pp 139–142 In Middleton G.V., Church M.J., Coniglio M., Hardie L.A. and Longstaffe F.J. (Editors) Encyclopedia of Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht.
  • Hodges, S.C. (2010). "Soil fertility basics" (PDF). Soil Science Extension, North Carolina State University. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  • Klein, Cornelis; Hurlbut, Cornelius S. Jr. (1993). Manual of mineralogy : (after James D. Dana) (21st ed.). New York: Wiley. ISBN 047157452X.
  • Koçkar, Mustafa K.; Akgün, Haluk; Aktürk, Özgür (November 2005). . Department of Geological Engineering, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008.
  • Leeder, M. R. (2011). Sedimentology and sedimentary basins : from turbulence to tectonics (2nd ed.). Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-40517783-2.
  • Moreno-Maroto, José Manuel; Alonso-Azcárate, Jacinto (September 2018). "What is clay? A new definition of "clay" based on plasticity and its impact on the most widespread soil classification systems". Applied Clay Science. 161: 57–63. Bibcode:2018ApCS..161...57M. doi:10.1016/j.clay.2018.04.011. S2CID 102760108.
  • Murray, H. (2002). (PDF). Mining, Minerals and Sustainable Development. 64: 1–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  • . Geoscape Ottawa-Gatineau. Natural Resources Canada. 7 March 2005. Archived from the original on 24 October 2005. Retrieved 21 July 2016.
  • Nesse, William D. (2000). Introduction to mineralogy. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195106916.
  • Olive, W.W.; Chleborad, A.F.; Frahme, C.W.; Shlocker, Julius; Schneider, R.R.; Schuster, R.L. (1989). "Swelling Clays Map of the Conterminous United States". U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map. I-1940. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  • Rankka, Karin; Andersson-Sköld, Yvonne; Hultén, Carina; Larsson, Rolf; Leroux, Virginie; Dahlin, Torleif (2004). (PDF). Report No. 65. Swedish Geotechnical Institute. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 April 2005. Retrieved 20 April 2005.
  • Scarre, C. (2005). The Human Past. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0500290636.
  • "What is clay". Science Learning Hub. University of Waikato. from the original on 3 January 2016. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  • White, W.A. (1949). "Atterberg plastic limits of clay minerals" (PDF). American Mineralogist. 34 (7–8): 508–512. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2020.

External links edit

  • The Clay Minerals Group of the Mineralogical Society 26 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Clay Minerals Society
  • Organic Matter in Clays

clay, other, uses, disambiguation, type, fine, grained, natural, soil, material, containing, clay, minerals, hydrous, aluminium, phyllosilicates, kaolinite, al2si2o5, develop, plasticity, when, hardened, through, firing, most, pure, clay, minerals, white, ligh. For other uses see Clay disambiguation Clay is a type of fine grained natural soil material containing clay minerals 1 hydrous aluminium phyllosilicates e g kaolinite Al2Si2O5 OH 4 Clays develop plasticity when wet but can be hardened through firing 2 3 4 Most pure clay minerals are white or light colored but natural clays show a variety of colors from impurities such as a reddish or brownish color from small amounts of iron oxide 5 6 Gay Head Cliffs in Martha s Vineyard consist almost entirely of clay A quaternary clay in EstoniaClay is the oldest known ceramic material Prehistoric humans discovered the useful properties of clay and used it for making pottery Some of the earliest pottery shards have been dated to around 14 000 BC 7 and clay tablets were the first known writing medium 8 Clay is used in many modern industrial processes such as paper making cement production and chemical filtering Between one half and two thirds of the world s population live or work in buildings made with clay often baked into brick as an essential part of its load bearing structure Clay is a very common substance Shale formed largely from clay is the most common sedimentary rock 9 Although many naturally occurring deposits include both silts and clay clays are distinguished from other fine grained soils by differences in size and mineralogy Silts which are fine grained soils that do not include clay minerals tend to have larger particle sizes than clays Mixtures of sand silt and less than 40 clay are called loam Soils high in swelling clays expansive clay which are clay minerals that readily expand in volume when they absorb water are a major challenge in civil engineering 1 Contents 1 Properties 2 Formation 3 Varieties 4 Uses 4 1 Medicine 4 2 Construction 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksProperties edit nbsp A 23 500 times magnified electron micrograph of smectite clayThe defining mechanical property of clay is its plasticity when wet and its ability to harden when dried or fired Clays show a broad range of water content within which they are highly plastic from a minimum water content called the plastic limit where the clay is just moist enough to mould to a maximum water content called the liquid limit where the moulded clay is just dry enough to hold its shape 10 The plastic limit of kaolinite clay ranges from about 36 to 40 and its liquid limit ranges from about 58 to 72 11 High quality clay is also tough as measured by the amount of mechanical work required to roll a sample of clay flat Its toughness reflects a high degree of internal cohesion 10 Clay has a high content of clay minerals that give it its plasticity Clay minerals are hydrous aluminium phyllosilicate minerals composed of aluminium and silicon ions bonded into tiny thin plates by interconnecting oxygen and hydroxide ions These plates are tough but flexible and in moist clay they adhere to each other The resulting aggregates give clay the cohesion that makes it plastic 12 In kaolinite clay the bonding between plates is provided by a film of water molecules that hydrogen bond the plates together The bonds are weak enough to allow the plates to slip past each other when the clay is being moulded but strong enough to hold the plates in place and allow the moulded clay to retain its shape after it is moulded When the clay is dried most of the water molecules are removed and the plates hydrogen bond directly to each other so that the dried clay is rigid but still fragile If the clay is moistened again it will once more become plastic When the clay is fired to the earthenware stage a dehydration reaction removes additional water from the clay causing clay plates to irreversibly adhere to each other via stronger covalent bonding which strengthens the material The clay mineral kaolinite is transformed into a non clay material metakaolin which remains rigid and hard if moistened again Further firing through the stoneware and porcelain stages further recrystallizes the metakaolin into yet stronger minerals such as mullite 4 The tiny size and plate form of clay particles gives clay minerals a high surface area In some clay minerals the plates carry a negative electrical charge that is balanced by a surrounding layer of positive ions cations such as sodium potassium or calcium If the clay is mixed with a solution containing other cations these can swap places with the cations in the layer around the clay particles which gives clays a high capacity for ion exchange 12 The chemistry of clay minerals including their capacity to retain nutrient cations such as potassium and ammonium is important to soil fertility 13 Clay is a common component of sedimentary rock Shale is formed largely from clay and is the most common of sedimentary rocks 9 However most clay deposits are impure Many naturally occurring deposits include both silts and clay Clays are distinguished from other fine grained soils by differences in size and mineralogy Silts which are fine grained soils that do not include clay minerals tend to have larger particle sizes than clays There is however some overlap in particle size and other physical properties The distinction between silt and clay varies by discipline Geologists and soil scientists usually consider the separation to occur at a particle size of 2 mm clays being finer than silts sedimentologists often use 4 5 mm and colloid chemists use 1 mm 2 Geotechnical engineers distinguish between silts and clays based on the plasticity properties of the soil as measured by the soils Atterberg limits ISO 14688 grades clay particles as being smaller than 2 mm and silt particles as being larger Mixtures of sand silt and less than 40 clay are called loam Some clay minerals such as smectite are described as swelling clay minerals because they have a great capacity to take up water and they increase greatly in volume when they do so When dried they shrink back to their original volume This produces distinctive textures such as mudcracks or popcorn texture in clay deposits Soils containing swelling clay minerals such as bentonite pose a considerable challenge for civil engineering because swelling clay can break foundations of buildings and ruin road beds 1 Formation edit nbsp Italian and African American clay miners in mine shaft 1910Clay minerals most commonly form by prolonged chemical weathering of silicate bearing rocks They can also form locally from hydrothermal activity 14 Chemical weathering takes place largely by acid hydrolysis due to low concentrations of carbonic acid dissolved in rainwater or released by plant roots The acid breaks bonds between aluminium and oxygen releasing other metal ions and silica as a gel of orthosilicic acid 15 The clay minerals formed depend on the composition of the source rock and the climate Acid weathering of feldspar rich rock such as granite in warm climates tends to produce kaolin Weathering of the same kind of rock under alkaline conditions produces illite Smectite forms by weathering of igneous rock under alkaline conditions while gibbsite forms by intense weathering of other clay minerals 16 There are two types of clay deposits primary and secondary Primary clays form as residual deposits in soil and remain at the site of formation Secondary clays are clays that have been transported from their original location by water erosion and deposited in a new sedimentary deposit 17 Secondary clay deposits are typically associated with very low energy depositional environments such as large lakes and marine basins 14 Varieties editThe main groups of clays include kaolinite montmorillonite smectite and illite Chlorite vermiculite 18 talc and pyrophyllite 19 are sometimes also classified as clay minerals There are approximately 30 different types of pure clays in these categories but most natural clay deposits are mixtures of these different types along with other weathered minerals 20 Clay minerals in clays are most easily identified using X ray diffraction rather than chemical or physical tests 21 Varve or varved clay is clay with visible annual layers that are formed by seasonal deposition of those layers and are marked by differences in erosion and organic content This type of deposit is common in former glacial lakes When fine sediments are delivered into the calm waters of these glacial lake basins away from the shoreline they settle to the lake bed The resulting seasonal layering is preserved in an even distribution of clay sediment banding 14 Quick clay is a unique type of marine clay indigenous to the glaciated terrains of Norway North America Northern Ireland and Sweden 22 It is a highly sensitive clay prone to liquefaction and has been involved in several deadly landslides 23 Uses edit nbsp Clay layers in a construction site in Auckland New Zealand Dry clay is normally much more stable than sand in excavations nbsp A 14th century bottle stopper made of fired clayModelling clay is used in art and handicraft for sculpting Clays are used for making pottery both utilitarian and decorative and construction products such as bricks walls and floor tiles Different types of clay when used with different minerals and firing conditions are used to produce earthenware stoneware and porcelain Prehistoric humans discovered the useful properties of clay Some of the earliest pottery shards recovered are from central Honshu Japan They are associated with the Jōmon culture and recovered deposits have been dated to around 14 000 BC 7 Cooking pots art objects dishware smoking pipes and even musical instruments such as the ocarina can all be shaped from clay before being fired Ancient peoples in Mesopotamia adopted clay tablets as the first known writing medium 8 Clay was chosen due to the local material being easy to work with and widely available 24 Scribes wrote on the tablets by inscribing them with a script known as cuneiform using a blunt reed called a stylus which effectively produced the wedge shaped markings of their writing After being written on clay tablets could be reworked into fresh tablets and reused if needed or fired to make them permanent records Purpose made clay balls were used as sling ammunition 25 Clay is used in many industrial processes such as paper making cement production and chemical filtering 26 Bentonite clay is widely used as a mold binder in the manufacture of sand castings 27 28 Mass bathing in liquid clayas a type of relaxation nbsp Video 10 minutes on YouTube nbsp Clay bath near lake Aheme in BeninMedicine edit Traditional uses of clay as medicine goes back to prehistoric times An example is Armenian bole which is used to soothe an upset stomach Some animals such as parrots and pigs ingest clay for similar reasons 29 Kaolin clay and attapulgite have been used as anti diarrheal medicines 30 Construction edit nbsp A clay building in South EstoniaClay as the defining ingredient of loam is one of the oldest building materials on Earth among other ancient naturally occurring geologic materials such as stone and organic materials like wood 31 Between one half and two thirds of the world s population in both traditional societies as well as developed countries still live or work in buildings made with clay often baked into brick as an essential part of its load bearing structure citation needed Also a primary ingredient in many natural building techniques clay is used to create adobe cob cordwood and structures and building elements such as wattle and daub clay plaster clay render case clay floors and clay paints and ceramic building material Clay was used as a mortar in brick chimneys and stone walls where protected from water Clay relatively impermeable to water is also used where natural seals are needed such as in pond linings the cores of dams or as a barrier in landfills against toxic seepage lining the landfill preferably in combination with geotextiles 32 Studies in the early 21st century have investigated clay s absorption capacities in various applications such as the removal of heavy metals from waste water and air purification 33 34 See also editArgillaceous minerals Fine grained aluminium phyllosilicatesPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Industrial plasticine Modeling material which is mainly used by automotive design studios Clay animation Stop motion animation made using malleable clay modelsPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Clay chemistry The chemical structures properties and reactions of clay minerals Clay court Type of tennis court Clay panel Building material made of clay with some additives Clay pit Open pit mining for the extraction of clay minerals Geophagia Practice of eating earth or soil like substrates such as clay or chalk Graham Cairns Smith Scottish chemist known for his controversial book Seven Clues to the Origin of Life London Clay Low permeable marine geological formation Modelling clay Any of a group of malleable substances used in building and sculpting Paper clay Clay with cellulose fiber Particle size Notion for comparing dimensions of particles in different states of matter Plasticine Brand of modeling clay Vertisol Clay rich soil prone to cracking Clay water interaction Various progressive interactions between clay minerals and waterNotes edit a b c Olive et al 1989 a b Guggenheim amp Martin 1995 pp 255 256 Science Learning Hub 2010 a b Breuer 2012 Klein amp Hurlbut 1993 pp 512 514 Nesse 2000 pp 252 257 a b Scarre 2005 p 238 a b Ebert 2011 p 64 a b Boggs 2006 p 140 a b Moreno Maroto amp Alonso Azcarate 2018 White 1949 a b Bergaya Theng amp Lagaly 2006 pp 1 18 Hodges 2010 a b c Foley 1999 Leeder 2011 pp 5 11 Leeder 2011 pp 10 11 Murray 2002 Nesse 2000 p 253 Klein amp Hurlbut 1993 pp 514 515 Klein amp Hurlbut 1993 p 512 Nesse 2000 p 256 Rankka et al 2004 Natural Resources Canada 2005 British Library www bl uk Archived from the original on 12 September 2022 Retrieved 9 May 2023 Forouzan et al 2012 Nesse 2000 p 257 Boylu 2011 Eisenhour amp Brown 2009 Diamond 1999 Dadu et al 2015 Grim 2016 Kockar Akgun amp Akturk 2005 Garcia Sanchez Alvarez Ayuso amp Rodriguez Martin 2002 Churchman et al 2006 References editClay mineral nomenclature American Mineralogist Bergaya Faiza Theng B K G Lagaly Gerhard 2006 Handbook of Clay Science Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 044183 2 Boggs Sam 2006 Principles of sedimentology and stratigraphy 4th ed Upper Saddle River N J Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 0131547283 Boylu Feridun 1 April 2011 Optimization of foundry sand characteristics of soda activated calcium bentonite Applied Clay Science 52 1 104 108 Bibcode 2011ApCS 52 104B doi 10 1016 j clay 2011 02 005 Breuer Stephen July 2012 The chemistry of pottery PDF Education in Chemistry 17 20 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Churchman G J Gates W P Theng B K G Yuan G 2006 Faiza Bergaya Benny K G Theng and Gerhard Lagaly ed Chapter 11 1 Clays and Clay Minerals for Pollution Control Developments in Clay Science Handbook of Clay Science Elsevier 1 625 675 doi 10 1016 S1572 4352 05 01020 2 ISBN 9780080441832 Dadu Ramona Hu Mimi I Cleeland Charles Busaidy Naifa L Habra Mouhammed Waguespack Steven G Sherman Steven I Ying Anita Fox Patricia Cabanillas Maria E October 2015 Efficacy of the Natural Clay Calcium Aluminosilicate Anti Diarrheal in Reducing Medullary Thyroid Cancer Related Diarrhea and Its Effects on Quality of Life A Pilot Study Thyroid 25 10 1085 1090 doi 10 1089 thy 2015 0166 PMC 4589264 PMID 26200040 Diamond Jared M 1999 Diamond on Geophagy ucla edu Archived from the original on 28 May 2015 Ebert John David 31 August 2011 The New Media Invasion Digital Technologies and the World They Unmake McFarland ISBN 9780786488186 Archived from the original on 24 December 2017 Ehlers Ernest G and Blatt Harvey 1982 Petrology Igneous Sedimentary and Metamorphic San Francisco W H Freeman and Company ISBN 0 7167 1279 2 Eisenhour D D Brown R K 1 April 2009 Bentonite and Its Impact on Modern Life Elements 5 2 83 88 Bibcode 2009Eleme 5 83E doi 10 2113 gselements 5 2 83 Foley Nora K September 1999 Environmental Characteristics of Clays and Clay Mineral Deposits usgs gov Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Forouzan Firoozeh Glover Jeffrey B Williams Frank Deocampo Daniel 1 December 2012 Portable XRF analysis of zoomorphic figurines tokens and sling bullets from Chogha Gavaneh Iran Journal of Archaeological Science 39 12 3534 3541 Bibcode 2012JArSc 39 3534F doi 10 1016 j jas 2012 04 010 Garcia Sanchez A Alvarez Ayuso E Rodriguez Martin F 1 March 2002 Sorption of As V by some oxyhydroxides and clay minerals Application to its immobilization in two polluted mining soils Clay Minerals 37 1 187 194 Bibcode 2002ClMin 37 187G doi 10 1180 0009855023710027 S2CID 101864343 Grim Ralph 2016 Clay mineral Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 9 December 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Guggenheim Stephen Martin R T 1995 Definition of clay and clay mineral Journal report of the AIPEA nomenclature and CMS nomenclature committees Clays and Clay Minerals 43 2 255 256 Bibcode 1995CCM 43 255G doi 10 1346 CCMN 1995 0430213 S2CID 129312753 Hillier S 2003 Clay Mineralogy pp 139 142 In Middleton G V Church M J Coniglio M Hardie L A and Longstaffe F J Editors Encyclopedia of Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks Kluwer Academic Publishers Dordrecht Hodges S C 2010 Soil fertility basics PDF Soil Science Extension North Carolina State University Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Klein Cornelis Hurlbut Cornelius S Jr 1993 Manual of mineralogy after James D Dana 21st ed New York Wiley ISBN 047157452X Kockar Mustafa K Akgun Haluk Akturk Ozgur November 2005 Preliminary evaluation of a compacted bentonite sand mixture as a landfill liner material Abstract Department of Geological Engineering Middle East Technical University Ankara Turkey Archived from the original on 4 December 2008 Leeder M R 2011 Sedimentology and sedimentary basins from turbulence to tectonics 2nd ed Chichester West Sussex UK Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 40517783 2 Moreno Maroto Jose Manuel Alonso Azcarate Jacinto September 2018 What is clay A new definition of clay based on plasticity and its impact on the most widespread soil classification systems Applied Clay Science 161 57 63 Bibcode 2018ApCS 161 57M doi 10 1016 j clay 2018 04 011 S2CID 102760108 Murray H 2002 Industrial clays case study PDF Mining Minerals and Sustainable Development 64 1 9 Archived from the original PDF on 20 April 2021 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Landslides Geoscape Ottawa Gatineau Natural Resources Canada 7 March 2005 Archived from the original on 24 October 2005 Retrieved 21 July 2016 Nesse William D 2000 Introduction to mineralogy New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195106916 Olive W W Chleborad A F Frahme C W Shlocker Julius Schneider R R Schuster R L 1989 Swelling Clays Map of the Conterminous United States U S Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map I 1940 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Rankka Karin Andersson Skold Yvonne Hulten Carina Larsson Rolf Leroux Virginie Dahlin Torleif 2004 Quick clay in Sweden PDF Report No 65 Swedish Geotechnical Institute Archived from the original PDF on 4 April 2005 Retrieved 20 April 2005 Scarre C 2005 The Human Past London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0500290636 What is clay Science Learning Hub University of Waikato Archived from the original on 3 January 2016 Retrieved 10 January 2016 White W A 1949 Atterberg plastic limits of clay minerals PDF American Mineralogist 34 7 8 508 512 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 7 December 2020 External links edit nbsp Look up clay in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clay nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Clay nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Clay The Clay Minerals Group of the Mineralogical Society Archived 26 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Information about clays used in the UK pottery industry The Clay Minerals Society Organic Matter in Clays Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clay amp oldid 1193460351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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