scholarly journals III.—On Some Quartz-schists from the Alps

1893 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 204-210
Author(s):  
T. G. Bonney

A thick mass of bedded schists, as I have described in more than one paper, occupies the highest position among the socalled metamorphic rocks of the Alps. With the exception of some gneisses—so far as I know of a porphyritic character, and almost certainly intrusive granites modified by pressure— and various green schists, which, in part at least, are basic igneous rocks, similarly affected, the group, which may be traced from one end of the chain to the other, consists of altered sediments.

2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Muhammad Resky Ariansyah ◽  
Muhammad Fawzy Ismullah Massinai ◽  
Muhammad Altin Massinai

Anabanua Village, Barru Regency is one of the areas in South Sulawesi that has quite unique geological conditions. This condition inseparably comes from the complicated geological process that took place during the formation of the island, Sulawesi. In Anabanua Village, there are many types of rocks such as sedimentary rocks, metamorphic rocks and igneous rocks. This paper aims to map and classify the types of rock by taking samples on different places in the research area. Then we observe the samples physical properties. The results showed, from taking 10 rock samples in different places, they have various characteristics. 8 of them were sedimentary rocks, they are Limestone Quartz, Limestone Sand, Shale, Sandstone, Coal, Limestone Bioturbation, Breccia, and Chert Stone. The other 2 samples were metamorphic rocks, they are Greenschist and Quartzite.


1938 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 296-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edwin Sherbon Hills

The occurrence of andalusite and sillimanite in unaltered igneous rocks is, according to the orthodox view expressed in most standard textbooks (see, e.g., Tyrrell, 1934, pp. 50, 164; Shand, 1927, pp. 62, 146; Grout, 1932, p. 230), always to be ascribed to contamination of magmas by highly aluminous sedimentary or metamorphic rocks. Having been given cause to doubt the correctness of this view by the recognition at Pyramid Hill, Victoria, of andalusite-bearing granites and aplites in which evidence of assimilation is lacking, I was then very interested to discover that the opinion has often been expressed, and evidence adduced in support of it, that both andalusite and sillimanite may be normal pyrogenetic constituents of igneous rocks.1 That is, they may under certain conditions crystallize from uncontaminated magmas. Some authors, while admitting that andalusite and sillimanite may crystallize from magmas, regard such pyrogenetic occurrences of these minerals as caused by the development of local excess of alumina, due to the assimilation of shales (e.g. Wells, 1931; Shand, 1927, p. 62). Others do not make their position clear, merely classing andalusite and sillimanite as assimilation minerals (sic), but Tyrrell goes so far as to state that they are “never of pyrogenetic oiigin” (1934, p. 50). Because of the reliance that is placed upon accessory minerals in igneous rocks as indicators of consanguinity of magmas and of the role of assimilation and other processes in pedogenesis, it is important that the status of each mineral should be thoroughly understood. In most classifications of accessory minerals andalusite and sillimanite are either classed as “contamination accessories” (Wells, 1931) or grouped with minerals that are commonly due to contamination (Wright, 1932), and Wright regards them as “of little value for correlation purposes”. Chatterjee, however, was able to use andalusite as an indicator, on the one hand, of relationship between the Falmouth and Bodmin Moor granites, both of these containing a purple variety in fair amount, and, on the other, of the distinction of these granites from those of Dartmoor and St. Austell, in which andalusite is colourless and rare. The rare, sporadically developed andalusite in the Dartmoor granite is considered by Brammall and Harwood (1923) to be a contamination mineral, but Teall suggested (1887) that the andalusite in the Cheesewring granite is probably an “original constituent” (i.e. not mechanically incorporated with the granite, as strew from xenoliths or wall rocks), and the relative abundance and uniformity of distribution of andalusite in the normal type of the Bodmin Moor granite, as exhibited at the Cheesewring (see Ghosh, 1927), lend support to this suggestion.


ARCHALP ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 66-75
Author(s):  
Antonio De Rossi ◽  
Roberto Dini

The contemporary architectural production in the Alps of Piedmont has to be studied taking into consideration the contrasting phenomena of depopulation and tourism that have involved the mountain areas of the region during last century. In the fifties and sixties the percentage of abandonment of the high valleys reaches even 80-90%. Entire communities move to industrial urban centers in the cities on the plain. On the other side we witness to a strong polarization of the winter stations that become real “banlieues blanches” for the free time of the citizens and where the architecture of alpine modernism, with various forms, shapes. The paradox nowadays is that the rarefaction of abandoned and depopulated territories is necessary to force to start and choose new innovative paths. We witness a contemporary situation with different shades: on one side the well-established touristic territories that need projects to promote the redevelopment and diversification, on the other side the marginal places where are rising new visions are practices of reactivation of the territory in which architecture is fundamental. The topic of quality of the construction of the physical space intersects with the regeneration of places on a cultural basis, new agriculture and green economy, innovative development of the patrimony, sustainable tourism, with inclusive and participative paths of nature, by giving new meanings to places and building new economies and identities.


1980 ◽  
Vol 117 (6) ◽  
pp. 547-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Swarbrick ◽  
A. H. F. Robertson

SummaryRecent resurgence of interest in the Mesozoic rocks of SW and southern Cyprus necessitates redefinition of the Mesozoic sedimentary and igneous rocks in line with modern stratigraphical convention. Two fundamentally different rocks associations are present, the Troodos Complex, not redefined, a portion of late Cretaceous oceanic crust, and the Mamonia Complex, the tectonically dismembered remnants of a Mesozoic continental margin. Based on earlier work, the Mamonia Complex is divided into two groups, each subdivided into a number of subsidiary formations and members. The Ayios Photios Group is wholly sedimentary, and records the evolution of a late Triassic to Cretaceous inactive continental margin. The Dhiarizos Group represents Triassic alkalic volcanism and sedimentation adjacent to a continental margin. Several other formations not included in the two groups comprise sedimentary mélange and metamorphic rocks. The Troodos Complex possesses an in situ late Cretaceous sedimentary cover which includes two formations of ferromanganiferous pelagic sediments, radiolarites and volcaniclastic sandstones. The overlying Cainozoic calcareous units are not redefined here.


Elements ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucie Tajčmanová ◽  
Paola Manzotti ◽  
Matteo Alvaro

The mechanisms attending the burial of crustal material and its exhumation before and during the Alpine orogeny are controversial. New mechanical models propose local pressure perturbations deviating from lithostatic pressure as a possible mechanism for creating (ultra-)high-pressure rocks in the Alps. These models challenge the assumption that metamorphic pressure can be used as a measure of depth, in this case implying deep subduction of metamorphic rocks beneath the Alpine orogen. We summarize petro-logical, geochronological and structural data to assess two fundamentally distinct mechanisms of forming (ultra-)high-pressure rocks: deep subduction; or anomalous, non-lithostatic pressure variation. Furthermore, we explore mineral-inclusion barometry to assess the relationship between pressure and depth in metamorphic rocks.


1961 ◽  
Vol S7-III (4) ◽  
pp. 345-354
Author(s):  
Andre Michard ◽  
P. Vialon

Abstract Igneous rocks of the Dora-Maira massif in the Po river headwater region in the Cottian Alps of Piedmont, Italy, are surrounded, and in many places surmounted, by gneiss, marble, and other associated metamorphic rocks of controversial age. The evidence is considered conclusive that the age of the rocks ranges from Permo-Carboniferous to Triassic. Criteria for discrimination of successive periods of metamorphism, including retrograde metamorphism, are reviewed. Carbonatized rocks and phengitic conglomeratic quartzite serve as "metamorphic thermometers" useful locally for discriminating successive periods of metamorphism. Cataclastic effects are also useful for determining time relationships, as are also optical peculiarities of quartz, feldspar, white mica, and biotite in various rocks. It is concluded that the region has been subjected to two major periods of metamorphism, and that the Alpine metamorphism in general was less intensive, and in certain aspects was retrograde compared with the pre-Alpine metamorphism.


1906 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 118-120
Author(s):  
Cosmo Johns

That silica appears as a constituent mineral of igneous rocks in two distinct phases, viz. quartz and tridymite, has been known for some time. The writer is not aware that any explanation has been offered which would indicate the conditions determining the appearance of one or the other in a cooling fused rock-mass. He now proposes to describe certain experiments made with a view to explain why it is that though the free silica generally appears as quartz, yet occasionally, as in certain trachytes, it crystallizes out as tridymite.


1963 ◽  
Vol 4 (35) ◽  
pp. 513-520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel E. Fisher

Abstract A description is given of two tunnels, each 60–70 m. long, one directly above the other, at 4,000 and 4,020 m, a.s.l. excavated through cold firn and ice of the Breithorn in the Alps. The temperature rose from −5.5° C. at the portal to −0.5° C. at the rock interface 70 m, from the portal in the upper tunnel, and from −5.5° C. to 0° C. at a water reservoir 60 m. from the portal in the lower tunnel. In both cases cracks or minute sealed crevasses, cut by the tunnel, operated to cool the ice locally below the temperature to be expected from a smooth curve. Possible. origins of the water reservoir are discussed. Small amounts of air at a moderate pressure, enclosed in small, sealed cracks and hollows, were punctured between 60 and 70 m. from the portal in the upper tunnel. The pungent odor of the air thus released was identified as ozone (a) by its characteristic odor, (b) by its reaction on rubber, and (c) by potassium iodide starch paper tests. The source of such ozone is suspected to be minute electric sparks resulting from static electric charges built up in cold ice when it is subjected under pressure to cracking or deformation; Photographs taken with exposures of 8 hr. in the upper tunnel at night apparently show such sparks. A description is given of the appearance of cold ice, frozen to the bedrock, being forcibly tortured into streamers and bands by the movement of the entire ice body at 0.6 m./yr.


1963 ◽  
Vol 4 (35) ◽  
pp. 513-520
Author(s):  
Joel E. Fisher

AbstractA description is given of two tunnels, each 60–70 m. long, one directly above the other, at 4,000 and 4,020 m, a.s.l. excavated through cold firn and ice of the Breithorn in the Alps. The temperature rose from −5.5° C. at the portal to −0.5° C. at the rock interface 70 m, from the portal in the upper tunnel, and from −5.5° C. to 0° C. at a water reservoir 60 m. from the portal in the lower tunnel. In both cases cracks or minute sealed crevasses, cut by the tunnel, operated to cool the ice locally below the temperature to be expected from a smooth curve. Possible. origins of the water reservoir are discussed.Small amounts of air at a moderate pressure, enclosed in small, sealed cracks and hollows, were punctured between 60 and 70 m. from the portal in the upper tunnel. The pungent odor of the air thus released was identified as ozone (a) by its characteristic odor, (b) by its reaction on rubber, and (c) by potassium iodide starch paper tests. The source of such ozone is suspected to be minute electric sparks resulting from static electric charges built up in cold ice when it is subjected under pressure to cracking or deformation; Photographs taken with exposures of 8 hr. in the upper tunnel at night apparently show such sparks.A description is given of the appearance of cold ice, frozen to the bedrock, being forcibly tortured into streamers and bands by the movement of the entire ice body at 0.6 m./yr.


1954 ◽  
Vol S6-IV (4-6) ◽  
pp. 203-208
Author(s):  
Jean Laporte

Abstract The metamorphic rocks outcropping around Ersa and Centuri in the northwestern part of Corse cape on Corsica, France, may possibly be the more highly metamorphosed equivalents (including retrograde products) of the other rocks forming the cape.


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