The Effects of Acid Rain on Cemetery Stones

Acid rain reacts chemically with marble and limestone grave markers, pitting the stone and making details unclear.
••• Hemera Technologies/Photos.com/Getty Images

Acid rain has many impacts, including damage to plants and acidification of lakes. The effect of acid rain on cemetery stones is clear enough that it has been used as an indicator of how much acid rain falls in a region. The Geological Society of America asked citizen scientists to record the width of limestone and marble cemetery stones because acid rain dissolves the components of the stone. The research program didn’t survive, but the effects of acid rain remain measurable in some cemeteries across the country.

Formation of Acid Rain

Acid rain is the result of water vapor reacting with gases such as sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide, forming sulfuric and nitric acids. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide are released into the atmosphere through natural processes, such as volcanoes and decomposition, but are also produced by burning fossil fuels. The acidic water vapor then condenses and falls to Earth as acid rain. Acid rain also happens through dry deposition, where the pollutants get stuck in smoke and dust and stick to surfaces, where they react to form acid the next time the surface gets wet.

Geology of Cemetery Stones

When selecting a rock to memorialize the deceased, there are several considerations. The first is whether it is possible to carve an inscription into the rock; the second is how enduring the rock will be as a monument; third is the aesthetic appeal of the final monument. Available options over the past few centuries are sandstone, limestone, marble, slate and granite. Sandstone and limestone are sedimentary rocks, while marble, slate and granite are harder metamorphic rocks. Limestone and marble are made up of calcium carbonate, making them susceptible to acid rain weathering.

Acid Rain and Calcium Carbonate

When rain falls on limestone or marble, a small amount of calcium carbonate dissolves into calcium and carbonate ions. The hydrogen and nitrate or sulfate ions from acid rain react with calcium and carbonate ions. The carbonate atom reacts with water to form bicarbonate, which reacts further with the hydrogen ions from the acid to create water and carbon dioxide gas. The reaction leaves calcium and nitrate or sulfate ions, which wash away. The carbon dioxide is why limestone fizzes when you drop strong acid onto it

Erosion of Cemetery Stones

Limestone and marble headstones become weathered because the elements slowly dissolve them. This is a natural process because the calcium carbonate they are made of is slightly soluble in water. Acid rain speeds weathering through its chemical reaction with calcium carbonate. The acid rain, in turn, damages the stone, leaving a rough, pitted surface and making writing and art harder to distinguish. Marble resists acid rain slightly more than limestone because its structure is more densely packed.

Related Articles

The Effect of Vinegar on Chicken Bones
What Are the Agents of Weathering?
Chalk and Vinegar Science Projects
Rock Lessons With Activities for the First Grade
Physical & Chemical Weathering
School Project: How to Make a Volcano That Blows Ash
The Effects of Acid Rain on Monuments
How Does Weathering Happen?
Weathering Process of Granite
How Do I Polish Sliced Agate?
Deposition Facts for Kids
How to Sand Limestone
Simple Weathering & Erosion Experiments for Third Grade
The Acid & Base Components of Ammonium Chloride
Forces That Cause Landforms
Fourth-Grade Science Projects With Rocks
What Factors Cause Mechanical Weathering?
How Does Freeze-Thaw Weathering Work?
Why Does Basalt Weather Faster Than Granite?
How to Polish River Rocks

Dont Go!

We Have More Great Sciencing Articles!