Sodium sulfates are widely regarded as the most destructive salts for porous stone, concrete and brick. Thenardite (Na2SO4), mirabilite (Na2SO4, 10H2O) and heptahydrate (Na2SO4, 7H2O) are the common phases that occur under surface conditions. The heptahydrate phase has been largely neglected in most modern work about salt weathering. However, several recent publications suggest that it could play an important role in geochemical and planetary processes. Therefore its role in the Na2SO4-H2O system should be clarified. We present here results of accelerated ageing experiments performed on samples of a micritic limestone under two different ambient temperatures: 20 C (i.e. below the upper limit of metastability of the heptahydrate), and 30 C (...