scholarly journals Industrial uses of carbonate rocks from Thassos island (Greece)

2001 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 1147
Author(s):  
Ν. ΚΑΝΤΗΡΑΝΗΣ ◽  
Α. ΤΣΙΡΑΜΠΙΔΗΣ ◽  
Α. ΦΙΛΙΠΠΙΔΗΣ ◽  
Α. ΚΑΣΩΛΗ-ΦΟΥΡΝΑΡΑΚΗ ◽  
Β. ΧΡΗΣΤΑΡΑΣ

The carbonate rocks of Thassos Island are holocrystalline and present sparitic texture. The dolomites have smaller crystall size (0.7-1.6 mm) than the calcitic marbles (0.8-2.2 mm). In the dolomites except the synonymous mineral, calcite (1-10%) and traces of quartz, feldspars and micas are present. In the calcitic marbles except of the calcite, dolomite (2-28%), micas (1-6%) and occasionally feldspars, clay minerals and goethite occur. The results of chemical analysis agree with the mineralogical ones, as well as with the percentage of the isnoluble residue. The dolomites appear purer than all other marbles of the island. They most often contain Si02 (up to 0.88%). Beyond the decorative applications the calcitic marbles of Thassos are mainly suitable for the production of aggregates with any size requirement, cement and probably container glasses, for environmental uses and as soil conditioners. Respectively, the dolomitic marbles are suitable for the production of fertilizers and probably of container glasses and as fillers or whitenings in paper, paint and rubber industries.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.N. Zinchuk

The most important typomorphic indications of clay formations in the studied crusts of weathering are as follows: a) omnipresent dioctahedral hydromica (2М1) in the crust of weathering of terrigenous-carbonate rocks and its association in the most mature profiles with kaolinite of relatively ordered structure, than of kaolinite, having been formed at the expense of other rocks; b) constant availability of trappean formation (tuffs, tufogene rocks, dolerites) in sections of crusts of weathering together with di- and trioctahedral montmorillonite, as well as disordered vermiculite-montmorillonite mixed-layered formation, to this or that degree disordered kaolinite, associated in the crust of weathering of tufogene rocks with halloysite (at complete absence of micaceous minerals in the products of weathering); c) the content in the crust of weathering of kimberlites together with polycationic montmorillonite of a significant quantity of trioctahedral chlorite (packets δ and δ’), serpentine (structural types A and B) and altered to various degree phlogopite, including related with it hydromica 1M.


1969 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 143-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
O.Karmie Galle

1974 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-436
Author(s):  
Ludmila Dolar-Mantuani ◽  
Ray Laakso

Rocks which contain significant amounts of swelling-type clay minerals disintegrate when they are exposed to drying and wetting or to freezing and thawing. The ethylene glycol immersion test is used as a standard test to simulate the breakdown of rocks, containing harmful amounts of expanding clay minerals, when they are used as construction materials in wet and freezing conditions.The glycol test was assessed for petrographic evaluation of argillaceous carbonate rocks intended for use in the construction industry. This was done by conducting the test on 61 small cylinders of a Paleozoic–Verulam argillaceous limestone which contained minor amounts of an expanding clay mineral interstratified with illite and subordinate chlorite. The development and propagation of cracks located in clay concentrations, as seen under a microscope, were used as assessment criteria. Cracks developed very slowly, therefore the test is considered unsuitable for industrial acceptance testing and for petrographic assessment of argillaceous carbonate rocks when quick test results are needed.


Author(s):  
Roman Semashchuk

Results of studies of key morphological, physical-chemical and chemical properties of underdeveloped carbonate soils, which are influenced by woody, herbaceous and agricultural plant formations on eluvium-delluvium carbonate rocks, were given. Key words: initial soils, morphological properties, physical and chemical properties, gross chemical analysis.


1996 ◽  
Vol 60 (400) ◽  
pp. 433-445 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shao-Yong Jiang ◽  
M. R. Palmer ◽  
Yan-He Li ◽  
Chun-Ji Xue

AbstractElectron-microprobe analyses of muscovite, biotite, and feldspar are reported for the stratiform Yindongzi—Daxigou Pb—Zn—Ag and Fe deposits of Qinling, northwestern China. The micas are characterized by high Ba levels in banded albite-carbonate rocks that host the deposits. The biotite is also rich in Cl, as is biotite in the nearby Tongmugou Pb-Zn deposit, although biotite and muscovite from this deposit lack Ba enrichment. It is likely that the Ba-rich micas in the Yindongzi-Daxigou deposits formed contemporaneously from the diagenesis and/or regional metamorphism of hydrothermally altered clay minerals, with the barium being derived from entrained pore fluids that may represent relict hydrothermal fluids associated with ore deposition. During the formation of coexisting muscovite and biotite, barium is preferentially partitioned into muscovite and chloride into biotite. Together with the presence of baryte rocks in the bedded ores, these data suggest that ore deposition in the Yindongzi—Daxigou deposits took place in a more oxidising environment than in the nearby Tongmugou deposit. This difference is attributed to the contrasting sedimentary environments of the two deposits, with the Yindongzi—Daxigou deposits having formed under shallow, oxic conditions and the Tongmugou deposit under deeper, anoxic conditions.


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