Serpentinite and Plants - It Is A Harsh World

Geology is one factor that shapes the plant world around us. Geology can influence the types and locations of plants. Geology contributes to plant endemism. Geology does by creating harsh soil conditions that discourage plant growth. Serpentinite rock is one well documented example where the chemical (and physical) characteristics of the rock discourage plant growth. Recall that I am not a botanist, so what I say is seen through the eyes of a geologist.

In this note, I share observations made on the former Munro Mine (Photo 1), located east of Matheson (Photo 2), Ontario, Canada, in the famous Abitibi Greenstone Belt (Photo 3). These observations demonstrate that serpentinite rock is a very challenging substrate for plants to grow on. I also illustrate how coarse cobble-sized rock fragments, in a waste rock dump, also create a substrate that is challenging for plants to grow on, regardless of the chemical composition of the rock type.

Photo 1: Location of the Munro Mine, east of Matheson, Ontario, Canada. Image: Google Earth, Nov. 12/21.

Photo 2: Location of the town of Matheson, Ontario, Canada. Image source: Google Earth, Nov. 12/21.

Photo 3: Location of the Abitibi Greenstone Belt, in Ontario, Canada. Image after Ontario Geological Survey.

Munro Mine

The Munro Mine opened in 1949-1950 and closed in 1964. The mineral mined was asbestos (Photo 4). The asbestos was contained in a rock called serpentinite (Photo 5). Serpentinite is a modified form of original ultramafic rocks that geologists call dunite and peridotite. These ultramafic rocks contain a lot of nickel, copper, iron, and other metal elements. Ultramafic rocks have virtually no plant nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium (standard plant fertilizers). This rock chemistry creates very challenging growing conditions for most plants; however, some specialized plants called “serpentine endemics” are adapted to grow in these harsh chemical conditions.

Photo 4: The red arrow points to a fibrous mineral called asbestos that was mined at the Munro Mine, east of the northern Ontario town of Matheson, Ontario, Canada. The mine open in 1949-1950 and closed in 1964. The rock that contains the asbestos is called serpentinite. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug 8/21.

Photo 5: The rock that contains the asbestos mined at the Munro Mine is called serpentinite, made of the mineral serpentine. Serpentine is the green-coloured mineral seen on the rock surface. Serpentine is created by changing the original rocks called dunite and peridotite, which are black to dark green in colour. Serpentine inherited high concentrations of nickel, copper, iron and other unusual metals from the original rocks dunite and peridotite. Serpentine contains virtually no nitrogen, potassium or phosphorous - elements needed as nutrients by plants. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug 8/21.

The following is the simplified process by which asbestos is extracted from the rock, which creates waste, or “left over” rock. Although I am not an expert of the milling of asbestos at the Munro Mine, I suspect the milling process I describe also applies to the Munro Mine.

Step 1: remove the asbestos-bearing rock from the ground using mining methods that create an open pit. When mining is completed, the pit fills with water and forms a lake (Photo 6).

Photo 6: This lake was the former Munro Mine open pit from which the asbestos-bearing rock was extracted by open pit mining. When the mine closed in 1964, water began to flood the open pit and today, a lake exists where once mining took place. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug 8/21.

Step 2: in the mill, the mined serpentinite rock is crushed to various grain sizes in order to liberate the asbestos mineral. Crushing creates a lot of “left-over” rock of various sizes that does not contain asbestos. That “left over” rock is stored as surface waste rock dumps (Photo 7).

Photo 7: Crushed rock that did not contain asbestos is called waste, or “left over”, rock. The waste rock was crushed to a range of grain sizes to liberate the asbestos. The coarse waste rock was stored in waste dumps seen in the foreground. The finest grained waste rock was stored in the large hill seen in the background. That hill is locally called “JM Mountain”. It stands about 250-300 feet above the surrounding land. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug 8/21.

Step 3: I don’t know the exact milling process used at the Munro Mine, but the simplest way to separate asbestos from the crushed serpentinite rock is to use large vacuums to suck up the asbestos fibre. No chemicals are used during this process. At the Munro Mine, the most finely crushed waste rock is stored in a large hill locally named “JM Mountain” (Photo 7, background).

That is a very simple explanation of the steps used to extract the mineral asbestos from waste serpentinite rock.

Different Personalities of Serpentine-rich Rock

In geological language, serpentine is the name of a family of secondary minerals. Geologists just call them all serpentine for simplicity. A rock composed mostly of serpentine is called serpentinite. Recall that serpentinite formed from pre-existing ultramafic rocks named dunite and peridotite.

Dunite and peridotite are not common on the Earth’s surface, but they are common in the Earth’s mantle, deep below the land surface. They were the original rocks that found themselves on, or close to, the Earth’s surface in northeastern Ontario (and elsewhere) about 2,700 million years ago. Dunite and peridotite: a) contain a primary mineral named olivine, which is not happy on, or near, the Earth’s surface; and b) contain a lot of magnesium and iron, very little potassium and calcium, a lot of nickel, copper, cobalt and chromium, and virtually no phosphorous and nitrogen. Olivine is the gemstone called peridot, which is the birthstone for the month of August.

On, or near, the Earth’s surface, the primary olivine reacts with water and is transformed to the secondary mineral called serpentine. That reaction takes place when great geological forces ravage the rock, sometimes during mountain-building, when continents smash into each other, and sometimes when the Earth is torn apart by faults. When serpentine is created, it inherits many of the chemical features of the primary olivine. So, the chemical personality of the serpentine-rich rock remains, more or less, the same as the primary dunite and peridotite.

Serpentine and serpentinite rock come in a range of colours: white, light green, blue-green, grey, blue-black, and black. The specific type of serpentine mineral dictates the mineral colour.

So, walking over the crushed rock waste dump at the Munro Mine, your eyes are treated to a cornucopia of coloured rocks, most of which contain serpentine (Photo 8)!

Photo 8: Examples of the many types and colours of crushed rock seen at the waste rock dump, Munro Mine, Ontario. Most, but not all, of these rocks contain serpentine, The different colours partly reflect the different serpentine minerals that make up the rock. Note the serpentinite above the camera lens cap that contains the fibrous form of serpentine called asbestos. Photo composed at the Munro Mine, Aug. 8/21.

Modern Uses of Serpentine

In addition to being the host rock for the industrial mineral called asbestos, a fibrous form of serpentine, serpentine and serpentinite rock: a) are used as architectural stone; b) can be transformed into a semi-precious gemstone; c) can be carved into rock art (Photo 9); d) sometimes contains pockets of jade, also used for carving; and e) is being investigated as a possible rock to sequester atmospheric CO2. Serpentine is a mineral and serpentinite is a rock that have many personalities.

Photo 9: A variety of carvings that are composed partly of the mineral called serpentine. From left to right: a) sheep carved from jade (British Columbia); b) bear carved from talc and serpentine (Artist Gene Solomon, Sudbury, Ontario); c) dark serpentine-bearing rock with bone puffin bird (Newfoundland and Labrador); d) inukshuk carving, Iqaluit, Nunavut, supported by a plastic figure that is a hydrocarbon product. Image: Andy Fyon, Ottawa, Nov 2/21.

Harsh Soils

Now, the physical characteristics of mine waste rock on the former Munro Mine area can create an habitat that is too “harsh” for plants to grow.

Some define harsh soil as having too much, or too little, of something essential for plant growth. Excess, such a soil nickel, may lead to plant toxicity. “Too little”, such as the absence of nitrogen, may lead to nutrient deficiency that will also negatively affect a plant. That definition works well for plant nutrients, but how does it apply to physical characteristics of the plant substrate? Well, “harsh soil” can also be described as being shallow soil with poor structure or texture, or even the absence of soil.

We would not consider rich, dark, moist soil on the floor of a deciduous forest as being harsh. Conversely, we would likely consider a substrate to be “harsh” if it consisted of fist-sized rock cobbles packed against each other in a way that left lots of spaces between the cobbles. We would describe the cobble pile as having high porosity, meaning many spaces between the cobbles, AND high permeability, meaning the spaces are interconnected. We would likely say the cobble habitat was really “harsh” if there was absolutely no silt- and clay-sized soil particles or organic material between the cobbles. Such a cobble substrate offers little in the way of nutrients for plant roots or for soil fungi mycelium needed to support healthy plant growth. One example of this type of cobble habitat, where virtually no organic soil exists between the cobbles, exists by the Montreal River Provincial Park (Ontario, Canada), where an old, raised cobble beach stands about 30 m (100 feet) above the present shore of Lake Superior. Few trees or other plants grow on much of the raised cobble beach (Photo 10).

Photo 10: An example of a harsh substrate, consisting of an old raise cobble beach, on the boundary of Montreal River Provincial Park. There is no organic or fine grained mineral soil between the cobbles because wave and water current action washed away the beach sand, leaving only cobbles. The open spaces between the cobbles are too difficult for the roots of trees or other plants to grow on and there is virtually no moisture retention. As an aside, this cobble beach was created along the edge of a lake called Lake Minong, in front of a glacier, during the Wisconsin glaciation, about 10,000 years ago. Geologists call Lake Minong a proglacial lake. Lake Minong occupied much of the present day Lake Superior basin. At that time, the water level was at least 30 m (100 feet) higher compared to present day Lake Superior because of the meltwater coming off the glacier and lakes to the west, like Lake Agassiz, and because there was no exit channel for the lake to drain away. About 8,500 years ago, the water level of Lake Superior, as we know it, stabilized as the glacier continued to melt back to the north, other proglacial lakes joined together, and the drainage shifted into the headwaters of the Ottawa River (more or less). Image: Andy Fyon, Montreal River Provincial Park, Ontario, Canada, Aug. 21/18.

A second “harsh soil” example occurs on the old Munro Mine property (Photo 11) where cobble-sized crushed rock occurs as a waste dump. On this rock dump, there is virtually no fine-grained or organic soil between the crushed rock fragments. Nutrient level is low and moisture retention is poor. Interestingly, where some trees have taken root (Photo 12), it is where a thin veneer of fine grained, crushed mine waste rock was dumped and duff has accumulated. That fine grained, organic-rich veneer of material provides some nutrients for plant roots and soil fungi.

Photo 11: A “harsh” substrate for plants occurs on the old Munro Mine property, Ontario, Canada, where cobble-sized, crushed rock occurs as a waste dump. On this waste rock dump, there is virtually no fine-grained or organic soil between the crushed rock fragments. Rain or snow melt water quickly disappears into the void space. Moisture retention is limited. Photo composed by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Photo 12: A few rare trees have taken root on the crushed rock waste dump at the Munro Mine. Many of those trees are growing now where a thin veneer of brown-coloured, fine grained mine waste rock was dumped and/or organic duff has accumulated. Image by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

So, from a geologist’s perspective, coarse-grained, crushed mine waste rock is a “harsh” place for plants to grow, regardless of the composition of the cobbles.

Really Harsh Soils

Now, recall when we discussed the definition of the phrase “harsh soil”, we recognized that some “harsh” soils can have too much, or too little, of something essential for plant growth. That harshness can come from the chemistry of the substrate soil. A really good example of this condition is seen on the hill of finely crushed waste serpentine rock at the former Munro Mine site (Photo 7). Very little vegetation grows on that finely crushed serpentine waste hill. The lack of vegetation cannot simply be attributed to high porosity and permeability of the hill, because the hill consists of finely crushed waste rock. So, we have to appeal to something else, like the chemical characteristics of the finely crushed serpentinite waste rock, to explain the lack of vegetation. The rock chemistry creates an habitat that is too harsh for most plants to grow in abundance. Recall that I am not a botanist, so what I say is through the eyes of a geologist.

Chemistry of Ultramafic Rock and Plants

Recall that serpentinite is a modified ultramafic rock. Ultramafic rock has an unusual chemistry: a) high concentrations of magnesium and the metals nickel, copper, cobalt, and cadmium; b) very low concentrations of calcium and very high concentrations of magnesium so that the substrate has a very low calcium to magnesium ration, in chemical terms; and c) virtually no concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorous or potassium. Nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium are essential plant nutrients. Calcium is needed for cell walls and cell membranes, but when faced with substrates having a very low calcium to magnesium ratio, such as on serpentinite substrates, plants do not do well. In addition, high concentrations of the metals nickel, copper, cobalt, and cadmium are poisonous to many plants. So, serpentinite, and derived soils, have a nutrient imbalance from a plant perspective. Simply, serpentinite rock and its derived soils, including finely crushed serpentinite, is a really “harsh” substrate for plants, except for a few specially adapted serpentine endemic plants.

When I look at the surface of the fine-grained serpentinite waste rock hill (Photo 13), I am struck by the lack of vegetation, despite the fact that the Munro Mine closed 37 years ago, which is a long time for plants to gain a root-hold on the material.

Photo 13: View at the top of the waste hill composed of finely crushed serpentinite rock, at the Munro Mine, Ontario, Canada. The serpentinite rock has an unusual chemistry: a) high concentrations of magnesium and the metals nickel, copper, cobalt, and cadmium; b) very low concentrations of calcium; c) virtually no concentrations of nitrogen, phosphorous or potassium. Nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium are essential plant nutrients. Calcium is needed for cell walls and cell membranes. Also, high concentrations of the metals nickel, copper, cobalt, and cadmium are poisonous to plants. So, serpentinite, and derived soils, have a nutrient imbalance from a plant perspective. Serpentinite and its derived soils, including finely crushed serpentinite, is a really harsh substrate for most plants, except for a few specially adapted serpentine endemic plants. Photo composed by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Of the sparse vegetation does does eek out an existence on the hill, the trees are stunted and consist predominantly of balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera; photo 14), accompanied by rare paper birch (Betula papyrifera; Photo 14), and rare white spruce (Picea glauca; photo 15). I also saw one occurrence of bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi; photo 16) and one occurrence of the orchid broad-leaved helleborine (Epipactis helleborine; photo 17).

Photo 14: There is virtually no vegetation growing on the finely crushed serpentinite because of the substrate chemistry, despite the fact that the mine closed 37 years ago. The few trees that are growing on the finely crushed serpentinite at the Munro Mine appear to be stunted. The most abundant tree is balsam poplar (Populus balsamifera;), growing in the lower right foreground of the image. Rare paper birch (Betula papyrifera) is seen growing in the background behind the balsam poplar. Photo by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Photo 15: Another rare tree seen growing on the finely crushed serpentinite, at the Munro Mine, is white spruce (Picea glauca). It is rare on this waste dump. The white spruce also appears to be stunted, despite the 37 years since the waste dump was last used. Photo by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Photo 16: This is the one occurrence of bearberry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi) that I saw growing on the finely crushed serpentinite rock hill at the Munro Mine. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Photo 17: This is the one occurrence of several one occurrence of the orchid broad-leaved helleborine (Epipactis helleborine) plants growing on the finely crushed serpentinite rock hill at the Munro Mine. Image: Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

Summary

It is interesting that this hill of finely crushed serpentine waste rock has been inactive and exposed for more than 35 years, yet the density of plant growth is low and the few plants that are present appear to be stunted. Few trees reached more than 1 metre in height (Photo 18). Weather likely contributes somewhat to the poor plant growth on the hill and some of the white spruce trees appear to show shape features associated with Krummholz trees - a type of stunted, deformed vegetation encountered in the subarctic and subalpine tree line landscapes, where the tree form is shaped by continual exposure to fierce, freezing winds. Yet, the virtual absence vegetation, even at the base elevation of the hill, strongly suggests the chemistry of the finely crushed serpentinite waste rock is the more important factor that discourages plant growth.

Photo 18: One area at the top of the finely crushed serpentinite hill is characterized by the presence of very small (stunted) balsam poplar. The white spruce trees look similar to Krummholz trees, suggesting that local weather plays a role in limiting tree height. However, the overall low density of plants and stunted tree size suggests the chemistry of the serpentinite substrate is a very important factor that discourages plant growth. Photo by Andy Fyon, Aug. 8/21.

So, from a geologist’s perspective, the finely crushed serpentinite rock dump is a “really harsh” place for plants to grow.

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Nov 13/21