Pa. Kirk et al., THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PRIMARY VOLCANIC FABRICS AND CLAY DISTRIBUTION INLANDSLIDES IN HONG-KONG, Journal of the Geological Society, 154, 1997, pp. 1009-1019
Most rain-induced landslides on Hong Kong's volcanic rocks are shallow
and small-scale. However, two major landslides that occurred on Hong
Kong Island in 1995 highlight relationships between primary volcanic f
oliations and kaolin accumulations that may have general significance
in determining loci of larger failures. In the first case, a bedding-p
arallel shear zone was the locus for kaolin concentration in a shallow
ly dipping tuff. This formed a weak, planar, low-permeability layer wh
ich acted as the surface of rupture of a translational failure. In the
second case, steeply inclined fabrics (eutaxitic foliations) and subp
arallel, closely spaced joints occurred within a zone of syn-volcanic
folding and shearing. Deep weathering developed along the zone, with k
aolin concentrations present mainly above the soil-rock interface. The
irregular and variably concave to planar rupture surface was closely
associated with kaolin-infilled relict joints towards the base of the
soil profile. Kaolin distribution is largely associated with the weath
ering profile, and may have been both physically and chemically redist
ributed within it. Halloysite is more abundant than kaolinite in most
clay samples at and near both rupture zones, and may have developed fr
om kaolinite in response to strain. Detailed mapping of volcanic fabri
cs around the major landslides suggests that kaolinized bedding-parall
el shear zones are uncommon, but that deep weathering zones associated
with shearing and faulting are common, mappable features.