Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks
Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks
Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks
specified otherwise.
The scale of photographs is generally shown by inclusion of a millimetre rule or a
white 10 em bar. For other cases, scale is stated in the figure caption.
Hardness is measured according to Mohs' scale, set out below. Other objects
(such as knives or coins) can be used to test the hardness of minerals once their own
hardnesses have been determined.
Talc
Gypsum
-Finger nails, soft metals.
3 Calcite
4 Fluorite
-Bronze coins (most).
5 Apatite
-Most glass and most steels
(e.g. hammer).
6 Feldspar
-Hard glass and hard steels
(e.g. knife).
7 Quartz
8 Topaz
9 Corundum
10 Diamond
1
2
Norman Fry
Department of Geology
University of Wales
College of Cardiff
JOHN WILEY
&
SONS
Contents
Page ix
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
1.1
Background
2.1
2.2
21
3 Ma~ing metamorphic
roc
3.1
29
4 Banding
39
5 Minerals, rock-types,
5.1 Minerals
5.2 Fine-grained material
5.3 Rock-type names
5.4 Reporting rock-types
5.5 Compositional category and
metamorphic grade
52
General
Textures
Fabric, cleavage and
schistosity types
6.4 Deformation fabrics
traversing a band
6.5 Deformation fabrics and
folds
67
83
91
8.1
9.1
9.2
97
10
Faults
Fault and shear-zone rocktypes
V111
Acknowledgements
The preparation of this book has been assisted by many people, often unknowingly. They include my colleagues in the Geology Depanment of the University
College of Swansea, the Editor and Authors of the Geological Society of London
Handbooks, my family and friends, and those geologists working in the Western
Alps during the summer of 1981 who got together and discussed geology and
fieldwork on many occasions.
Introduction
2 Metamorphic - relating to local
mineral changes.
3 Metasomatic - involving chemical
This book is about describing metatransport and mineral change.
morphic rocks and rock-masses. It is
4 Structural - relating to rock deprimarily for use in the field, when
formation.
describing those aspects of metamorphic rocks which are discernible with
As the first three all require microonly basic equipment (handlens, scopic and chemical techniques for
hammer, clinometer, etc.). It has been specialist study, there is a practical limit
written with final-year undergraduate to their non-speciali~ description in
students in mind, but should be helpful the field. The limit to what may be
to any undergraduate, graduate stud- expected in the way of structural
ent, practising geologist or amateur description is less obvious. It is
faced with making a general description assumed here that production of a map
of an area of metamorphic rocks. This is essential and one chapter has been
book provides a: systematic framework, given to considering the problems
enabling readers to produce useful and which can arise when mapping in
broadly similar descriptions, despite metamorphic terrains. The companion
possible differences of background or handbook, Basic Geological Mapping,
specialist interest. It does not provide should be referred to for mapping
metamorphic specialists with assistance techniques. Qualitative relationships
in the detailed interpretation of meta- between structural and metamorphic
aspects of a rock-mass are important,
morphism.
This volume is a companion to hand- and this book gives guidance on their
books on the field description of sedi- treatment. Quantitative geometry and
mentary and igneous rocks. It therefore mechanisms of deformation are not
does not cover pre-metamorphic feat- dealt with, being considered beyond
ures of obvious sedimentary or igneous the scope of a non-specialist descriporigin which may sometimes be pre- tion.
served in metamorphic rocks. The
reader will have to decide whether to
refer to this book alone or to the 1.2 Approach to metamorphic
handbook set, in areas where pre- rocks
metamorphic features are preserved.
Describable features of metamorphic There is a widespread belief that metarock-masses may be:
morphic rocks are the most difficult
Pre-metamorphic in origin (though rocks to understand. The techniques
perhaps altered beyond recog- used in laboratory studies of metamorphic petrology can certainly seem
nition).
1.1