Field trip — sat march 18th

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Field trip — sat  march 18th

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Field trip — Sat March 18th Driver who can take passengers? Bring a pen, hand lens, lunch and water (~1L) Wear layers — prepare for wet, windy conditions …rain jacket, umbrella?, sweatshirt… Wear shoes with good tread …hiking boots, good tennis shoes, or wellies (your feet might get wet) Eclogite formation along fractures — Gabbro was metastable Granulite-eclogite transition Bergen Arcs, Norway Chapter 22: A Classification of Metamorphic Rocks • Metamorphic rocks are classified on the basis of texture and composition (either mineralogical or chemical) • Unlike igneous rocks, which have been plagued by a proliferation of local and specific names, metamorphic rock names are surprisingly simple and flexible • May choose some prefix-type modifiers to attach to names if care to stress some important or unusual textural or mineralogical aspects Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks • Foliation: and planar fabric element • Lineation: any linear fabric elements – They have no genetic connotations – Some high-strain rocks may be foliated, but they are treated separately Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Cleavage – Traditionally: the property of a rock to split along a regular set of sub-parallel, closely-spaced planes – A more general concept adopted by some geologists is to consider cleavage to be any type of foliation in which the aligned platy phyllosilicates are too fine grained to see individually with the unaided eye Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Schistosity – A preferred orientation of inequaint mineral grains or grain aggregates produced by metamorphic processes – Aligned minerals are coarse grained enough to see with the unaided eye – The orientation is generally planar, but linear orientations are not excluded Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Gneissose structure – Either a poorly-developed schistosity or segregated into layers by metamorphic processes – Gneissose rocks are generally coarse grained Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Slate: compact, very finegrained, metamorphic rock with a well-developed cleavage Freshly cleaved surfaces are dull Phyllite: a rock with a schistosity in which very fine phyllosilicates (sericite/phengite and/or chlorite), although rarely coarse enough to see unaided, impart a silky sheen to the foliation surface Phyllites with both a foliation and lineation are very common a b Figure 22-1 Examples of foliated metamorphic rocks a Slate b Phyllite Note the difference in reflectance on the foliation surfaces between a and b: phyllite is characterized by a satiny sheen Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Schist: a metamorphic rock exhibiting a schistosity By this definition schist is a broad term, and slates and phyllites are also types of schists In common usage, schists are restricted to those metamorphic rocks in which the foliated minerals are coarse enough to see easily in hand specimen Figure 22-1c Garnet muscovite schist Muscovite crystals are visible and silvery, garnets occur as large dark porphyroblasts Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks Gneiss: a metamorphic rock displaying gneissose structure Gneisses are typically layered (also called banded), generally with alternating felsic and darker mineral layers Gneisses may also be lineated, but must also show segregations of felsic-mineral-rich and darkmineral-rich concentrations Figure 22-1d Quartzo-feldspathic gneiss with obvious layering Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Chapter 22: Specific Metamorphic Rock Types Serpentinite: an ultramafic rock metamorphosed at low grade, so that it contains mostly serpentine Greenschist/Greenstone: a low-grade metamorphic rock that typically contains chlorite, actinolite, epidote, and albite Note that the first three minerals are green, which imparts the color to the rock Such a rock is called greenschist if foliated, and greenstone if not The protolith is either a mafic igneous rock or graywacke Amphibolite: a metamorphic rock dominated by hornblende + plagioclase Amphibolites may be foliated or non-foliated The protolith is either a mafic igneous rock or graywacke Chapter 22: Specific Metamorphic Rock Types Blueschist: a blue amphibole-bearing metamorphosed mafic igneous rock or mafic graywacke This term is so commonly applied to such rocks that it is even applied to non-schistose rocks Eclogite: a green and red metamorphic rock that contains clinopyroxene and garnet (omphacite + pyrope) The protolith is typically basaltic Figure 21-1 Metamorphic field gradients (estimated P-T conditions along surface traverses directly up metamorphic grade) for several metamorphic areas After Turner (1981) Metamorphic Petrology: Mineralogical, Field, and Tectonic Aspects McGraw-Hill Fig 25-3 Temperaturepressure diagram showing the three major types of metamorphic facies series proposed by Miyashiro (1973, 1994) Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Metamorphic Facies Fig 25-2 Temperaturepressure diagram showing the generally accepted limits of the various facies used in this text Boundaries are approximate and gradational The “typical” or average continental geotherm is from Brown and Mussett (1993) Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Paired Metamorphic Belts of Japan Metamorphic Facies • Table 25-1 The definitive mineral assemblages that characterize each facies (for mafic rocks) Table 25-1 Definitive Mineral Assemblages of Metamorphic Facies Facies Definitive Mineral Assemblage in Mafic Rocks Zeolite zeolites: especially laumontite, wairakite, analcime Prehnite-Pumpellyite prehnite + pumpellyite (+ chlorite + albite) Greenschist chlorite + albite + epidote (or zoisite) + quartz ± actinolite Amphibolite hornblende + plagioclase (oligoclase-andesine) ± garnet Granulite orthopyroxene (+ clinopyrixene + plagioclase ± garnet ± hornblende) Blueschist glaucophane + lawsonite or epidote (+albite ± chlorite) Eclogite pyrope garnet + omphacitic pyroxene (± kyanite) Contact Facies After Spear (1993) Mineral assemblages in mafic rocks of the facies of contact metamorphism not differ substantially from that of the corresponding regional facies at higher pressure Fig 25-9 Typical mineral changes that take place in metabasic rocks during progressive metamorphism in the medium P/T facies series The approximate location of the pelitic zones of Barrovian metamorphism are included for comparison Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall Fig 26-19 Simplified petrogenetic grid for metamorphosed mafic rocks showing the location of several determined univariant reactions in the CaO-MgO-Al2O3-SiO2-H2O-(Na2O) system (“C(N)MASH”) Winter (2001) An Introduction to Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology Prentice Hall [...]... contains clinopyroxene and garnet (omphacite + pyrope) The protolith is typically basaltic Figure 21-1 Metamorphic field gradients (estimated P-T conditions along surface traverses directly up metamorphic grade) for several metamorphic areas After Turner (1981) Metamorphic Petrology: Mineralogical, Field, and Tectonic Aspects McGraw-Hill Fig 25-3 Temperaturepressure diagram showing the three major types

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Mục lục

  • Field trip — Sat. March 18th

  • Eclogite formation along fractures — Gabbro was metastable

  • Chapter 22: A Classification of Metamorphic Rocks

  • Chapter 22: Foliated Metamorphic Rocks

  • Slide 5

  • Slide 6

  • Slide 7

  • Slide 8

  • Slide 9

  • Slide 10

  • Chapter 22: Specific Metamorphic Rock Types

  • Slide 12

  • PowerPoint Presentation

  • Slide 14

  • Metamorphic Facies

  • Slide 16

  • Slide 17

  • Slide 18

  • Slide 19

  • Slide 20

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