Stefano Cuccuru
University of Sassari
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Featured researches published by Stefano Cuccuru.
Journal of Maps | 2015
Leonardo Casini; Stefano Cuccuru; Matteo Maino; Giacomo Oggiano; Antonio Puccini; Philippe Rossi
In this paper, we present a geological structural map (1:100,000 scale, ∼2300 km2 surface area) of the Variscan basement of northern Sardinia. The map integrates field structural analysis, extensive gamma-ray spectrometry, and high-resolution ELA-ICP-MS U/Th-Pb zircon and monazite dating. A set of 10 samples of granitic rocks collected from different plutons were characterized for their crystallization age. This provided an accurate timing of magmatic events related to the development of the Corsica-Sardinia Batholith. The structural map, complemented with geochronological results represents a benchmark for future studies on Variscan geodynamics.
Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment | 2012
Stefano Cuccuru; Leonardo Casini; Giacomo Oggiano; Gian Piero Cherchi
The physical–mechanical behaviour of the weathered San Giacomo granite, Sardinia, has been investigated using a combination of physical–mechanical tests and microstructural analysis. Fieldwork and microscopy suggest a pervasive microfracture system developed on a pre-existing magmatic quartz anisotropy. Alteration indices, chemical analyses and mineralogy indicate that the yellow staining is produced by the circulation of oxygen-rich rainwater through microfractures in the rock, resulting in the oxidation of biotites. Apart from the obvious modification of the original grey colouring, the precipitation of Fe-oxides and hydroxides has welded fractures together, leading to the partial recovery of the physical–mechanical properties previously compromised due to microfracturing.RésuméLe comportement physico-mécanique du granite altéré de San Giacomo (Sardaigne) a été étudié à partir de plusieurs essais physico-mécaniques et des analyses microstructurales. Les observations de terrain et au microscope suggèrent qu’un système généralisé de micro-fractures s’est développé à partir d’une anisotropie préexistante des quartz d’origine magmatique. Des indices d’altération, des analyses chimiques et minéralogiques indiquent que la coloration jaune est produite par la circulation d’eaux de pluie, riches en oxygène, au travers des micro-fractures de la roche, avec pour conséquence l’oxydation des biotites. En dehors de la modification évidente de la couleur grise d’origine, les précipitations d’oxydes et d’hydroxydes de fer ont soudé ensemble les fractures, conduisant à une récupération partielle des propriétés physico-mécaniques qui avaient été affaiblies par la micro-fracturation.
Journal of Maps | 2016
M. Kaçeli Xhixha; Matteo Alberi; Marica Baldoncini; G. P. Bezzon; G. P. Buso; Ivan Callegari; Leonardo Casini; Stefano Cuccuru; G. Fiorentini; Enrico Guastaldi; Fabio Mantovani; L. Mou; Giacomo Oggiano; Antonio Puccini; C. Rossi Alvarez; Virginia Strati; Gerti Xhixha; A. Zanon
ABSTRACT We present a detailed map of uranium distribution and its uncertainties in the Variscan Basement of Northeastern Sardinia (VBNS) at a scale of 1:100,000. An area of 2100 km2 was investigated by means of 535 data points obtained from laboratory and in situ gamma-ray spectrometry measurements. These data volume corresponds to the highest sampling density of the European Variscides, aimed at studying the genetic processes of the upper crust potentially triggered by an enrichment of radiogenic heat-producing elements. For the first time, the Kriging with Variance of Measurement Error method was used to assign weights to the input data which are based on the degree of confidence associated with the measurements obtained using different gamma-ray spectrometry techniques. A detailed tuning of the model parameters for the adopted Experimental Semi-Variogram led to the identification of a maximum distance of spatial variability coherent to the observed tendency of the experimental data. We demonstrate that the obtained uranium distribution in the VBNS, characterized by several calc-alkaline plutons emplaced within migmatitic massifs and amphibolite-facies metamorphic rocks, is an excellent benchmark for the study of ‘hot’ collisional chains. The uranium map of VBNS, and in particular the Arzachena minor pluton, confirms the emplacement model based on the recognition of the different petrological associations characterizing the Variscan magmatic processes in the Late Paleozoic. Furthermore, the presented model of the uranium content of the geological bedrock is a potential baseline for future mapping of radon-prone areas.
Journal of Maps | 2016
Stefano Cuccuru; Stefano Naitza; Francesco Secchi; Antonio Puccini; Leonardo Casini; Pamela Pavanetto; Ulf Linnemann; Mandy Hofmann; Giacomo Oggiano
ABSTRACT This paper presents the geological, structural and metallogenic map of the Arbus Pluton, a late Variscan composite intrusion belonging to the Corsica-Sardinia Batholith. The pluton is surrounded and crosscut by a wide variety of vein ore deposits. The Arbus Pluton was emplaced at shallow crustal levels at the end of the Variscan Orogeny, along an E–W trending shear zone located in the low-grade external nappe pile of the Sardinian basement. The architecture of the pluton is roughly concentric with a core of cordierite-bearing leucogranites and an outer shell composed of pyroxene-bearing and hornblende granodiorites. New U/Pb dating on zircons of granodiorite yields an emplacement age of 303.7 ± 1.1 which improves previous Rb/Sr and Ar/Ar dating. The map has been compiled on the basis of new geological/structural surveys and petrographical studies coupled with in situ gamma ray spectrometry. All the data-sets have been processed using a geographical information system.
Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment | 2018
Stefano Cuccuru; Paola Mameli; Alberto Mariani; Paola Meloni; Giacomo Oggiano
Textural, physical–mechanical, and mineralogical–chemical properties influence the degradation of building stone. These properties also control the efficacy of different preventative treatments to inhibit degradation. In this study, several historic buildings in northern Sardinia, Italy, constructed with a wide variety of building stones were examined in order to contrast degradation effects with and without frontal polymerization. Different types of degradation were observed in carbonate and volcanic lithologies, which compromise their durability and toughness. Among the different lithotypes tested, four revealed a good response to the polymerization treatment. Textural and physical–mechanical evidences show that open porosity and capillary absorption control the suitability of this treatment. Laboratory tests on both untreated and treated specimens revealed a strong reduction of parameters directly related to decay (e.g., open porosity and water absorption), as well as an improvement on crush strength. Moreover, the polymerization treatment retains a residual porosity sufficient to enable the rock to equilibrate with the ambient environmental humidity.
Archive | 2014
Stefano Cuccuru; Leonardo Casini; Stefano Naitza; Antonio Puccini; Francesco Secchi; Giacomo Oggiano
Lucchi, Renata G. ... et. al.-- 87° Congresso della Societa Geologica Italiana e 90° Congresso della Societa Italiana di Mineralogia e Petrologia, The Future of the Italian Geosciences - The Italian Geosciences of the Future, 10-12 September 2014, Milan, Italy.-- 1 pageThe Montellina Spring (370 m a.s.l.) represents an example of groundwater resource in mountain region. It is a significant source of drinking water located in the right side of the Dora Baltea Valley (Northwestern Italy), SW of Quincinetto town. This spring shows a morphological location along a ridge, 400 m from the Renanchio Torrent in the lower sector of the slope. The spring was investigated using various methodologies as geological survey, supported by photo interpretation, structural reconstruction, NaCl and fluorescent tracer tests, discharge measurements. This multidisciplinary approach, necessary due to the complex geological setting, is required for the importance of the Montellina Spring. It is interesting in the hydrogeological context of Western Alps for its high discharge, relatively constant over time (average 150 l/s), and for its location outside a fluvial incision and suspended about 40 m above the Dora Baltea valley floor (Lasagna et al. 2013). According to the geological setting, the hydrogeological reconstruction of the area suggests that the large amount of groundwater in the basin is essentially favoured by a highly fractured bedrock, covered by wide and thick bodies of glacial and gravitational sediments. The emergence of the water along the slope, in the Montellina Spring, is essentially due to a change of permeability between the deep bedrock and the shallow bedrock and/or surficial sediments. The deep bedrock, showing closed fractures and/or fractures filled by glacial deposits, is slightly permeable. The shallow bedrock, strongly loosened as result of gravitational phenomena, and the local gravitational sediments are, on the contrary, highly permeable. The concentration of water at the spring is due to several reasons. a) The spring is immediately downward a detachment niche, dipping towards the spring, that essentially drains the water connected to the change of permeability in the bedrock. b) It is along an important fracture, that carries a part of the losses of the Renanchio Torrent. c) Finally, it is favored by the visible and buried morphology. Although it is located along a ridge, the spring occurs in a small depression between a moraine and a landslide body. It also can be favored by the likely concave trend of buried base of the landslide. At last, tracer tests of the Renanchio Torrent water with fluorescent tracer are performed, with a continuous monitoring in the Montellina Spring. The surveys permit to verify and quantify the spring and torrent hydrogeological relationship, suggesting that only a small fraction of stream losses feeds the spring.
Tectonophysics | 2012
Leonardo Casini; Stefano Cuccuru; Matteo Maino; Giacomo Oggiano; Massimo Tiepolo
Tectonophysics | 2015
Leonardo Casini; Stefano Cuccuru; Antonio Puccini; Giacomo Oggiano; Philippe Rossi
Computers & Geosciences | 2013
Leonardo Casini; Antonio Puccini; Stefano Cuccuru; Matteo Maino; Giacomo Oggiano
Environmental Earth Sciences | 2014
Antonio Puccini; Gerti Xhixha; Stefano Cuccuru; Giacomo Oggiano; Merita Kaçeli Xhixha; Fabio Mantovani; Carlos Rossi Alvarez; Leonardo Casini