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Understanding Metamorphism and Rocks

Metamorphism is the process by which rocks are changed by heat, pressure, and chemically active fluids. There are three main agents that drive metamorphism - heat, pressure, and chemically active fluids. Metamorphic rocks develop textures like foliation as they recrystallize under these conditions. Common foliated metamorphic rocks include slate, phyllite, schist, and gneiss, which differ in their grain size and mineral composition due to varying degrees of metamorphism.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views8 pages

Understanding Metamorphism and Rocks

Metamorphism is the process by which rocks are changed by heat, pressure, and chemically active fluids. There are three main agents that drive metamorphism - heat, pressure, and chemically active fluids. Metamorphic rocks develop textures like foliation as they recrystallize under these conditions. Common foliated metamorphic rocks include slate, phyllite, schist, and gneiss, which differ in their grain size and mineral composition due to varying degrees of metamorphism.

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prakash patel
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Metamorphism Metamorphism

• The transition of one rock into another by • Metamorphism progresses incrementally


temperatures and/or pressures unlike those from low-grade to high-grade
in which it formed • During metamorphism the rock must
• Metamorphic rocks are produced from remain essentially solid
• Igneous rocks
• Sedimentary rocks
• Other metamorphic rocks

Metamorphic Settings Agents of metamorphism


• Metamorphic settings • Heat
• Contact or thermal metamorphism – driven • The most important agent
by a rise in temperature within the host rock • Recrystallization results in new, stable
Hydrothermal metamorphism – chemical minerals
alterations from hot, ion-rich water • Two sources of heat
• Regional metamorphism – Contact metamorphism – heat from magma
– Occurs during mountain building – An increase in temperature with depth due to the
– Produces the greatest volume of metamorphic geothermal gradient
rock
– Rocks usually display zones of contact and/or
hydrothermal metamorphism

Origin of pressure in
Agents of metamorphism metamorphism

• Pressure (stress)
• Increases with depth
• Confining pressure applies forces equally
in all directions
• Rocks may also be subjected to differ-
ential stress which is unequal in different
directions

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Agents of metamorphism
Agents of metamorphism

• Chemically active fluids • Chemically active fluids


• Mainly water with other volatile com- • Sources of fluids
ponents – Pore spaces of sedimentary rocks
• Enhances migration of ions – Fractures in igneous rocks
• Aids in recrystallization of existing – Hydrated minerals such as clays and micas
minerals

Agents of metamorphism Metamorphic textures


• The importance of parent rock • Texture refers to the size, shape, and
• Most metamorphic rocks have the same arrangement of grains within a rock
overall chemical composition as the parent • Foliation – any planar arrangement of
rock from which they formed
mineral grains or structural features within
• Mineral makeup determines, to a large a rock
extent, the degree to which each
metamorphic agent will cause change • Examples of foliation
– Parallel alignment of platy and/or elongated
minerals

Metamorphic textures Metamorphic textures


• Foliation • Foliation
• Examples of foliation • Foliation can form in various ways including
– Parallel alignment of flattened mineral grains – Rotation of platy and/or elongated minerals
and pebbles – Recrystallization of minerals in the direction of
– Compositional banding preferred orientation
– Slaty cleavage where rocks can be easily split into – Changing the shape of equidimensional grains
thin, tabular sheets into elongated shapes that are aligned

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Development of foliation due
to directed pressure Metamorphic textures
• Foliated textures
• Rock or slaty cleavage
– Closely spaced planar surfaces along which rocks
split
– Can develop in a number of ways depending on
metamorphic conditions and parent rock

Metamorphic textures Metamorphic textures


• Foliated textures • Foliated textures
• Schistosity • Gneissic
– Platy minerals are discernible with the unaided – During higher grades of metamorphism, ion
eye and exhibit a planar or layered structure migration results in the segregation of minerals
– Rocks having this texture are referred to as – Gneissic rocks exhibit a distinctive banded
schist appearance

Metamorphic textures Metamorphic textures


• Other metamorphic textures • Other metamorphic textures
• Those metamorphic rocks that lack foliation • Porphyroblastic textures
are referred to as nonfoliated – Large grains, called porphyroblasts, surrounded
– Develop in environments where deformation is by a fine-grained matrix of other minerals
minimal – Porphyroblasts are typically garnet, staurolite,
– Typically composed of minerals that exhibit and/or andalusite
equidimensional crystals

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Common metamorphic rocks Common metamorphic rocks
• Foliated rocks • Foliated rocks
• Slate • Phyllite
– Very fine-grained – Gradation in the degree of metamorphism
between slate and schist
– Excellent rock cleavage
– Platy minerals not large enough to be identified
– Most often generated from low-grade with the unaided eye
metamorphism of shale, mudstone, or siltstone – Glossy sheen and wavy surfaces
– Exhibits rock cleavage
– Composed mainly of fine crystals of muscovite
and/or chlorite

Phyllite (left) and Slate (right)


lack visible mineral grains Common metamorphic rocks
• Foliated rocks
• Schist
– Medium- to coarse-grained
– Platy minerals predominate
– Commonly include the micas
– The term schist describes the texture
– To indicate composition, mineral names are used
(such as mica schist)

A mica garnet schist


Common metamorphic rocks
• Foliated rocks
• Gneiss
– Medium- to coarse-grained
– Banded appearance
– High-grade metamorphism
– Often composed of white or light-colored
feldspar-rich layers with bands of dark
ferromagnesian minerals

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Gneiss typically displays
a banded appearance Common metamorphic rocks
• Nonfoliated rocks
• Marble
– Coarse, crystalline
– Parent rock was limestone or dolostone
– Composed essentially of calcite or dolomite
crystals
– Used as a decorative and monument stone
– Exhibits a variety of colors

Marble – a nonfoliated
metamorphic rock Common metamorphic rocks
• Nonfoliated rocks
• Quartzite
– Formed from a parent rock of quartz-rich
sandstone
– Quartz grains are fused together

Quartzite

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Contact metamorphism
Metamorphic environments
• Contact or thermal metamorphism
• Occurs due to a rise in temperature when
magma invades a host rock
• A zone of alteration called an aureole forms
in the rock surrounding the magma
• Most easily recognized when it occurs at the
surface, or in a near-surface environ-ment

Metamorphic environments
• Hydrothermal metamorphism
• Chemical alteration caused when hot, ion-
rich fluids, called hydrothermal solutions,
circulate through fissures and cracks that
develop in rock
• Most widespread along the axis of the mid-
ocean ridge system

Regional metamorphism
Metamorphic environments
• Regional metamorphism
• Produces the greatest quantity of
metamorphic rock
• Associated with mountain building

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Metamorphic environments Metamorphic environments
• Other metamorphic environments • Other metamorphic environments
• Burial metamorphism • Impact metamorphism
– Associated with very thick sedimentary strata – Occurs when high speed projectiles called
– Required depth varies from one location to meteorites strike Earth’s surface
another depending on the prevailing geothermal – Products are called impactites
gradient
• Metamorphism along fault zones
– Occurs at depth and high temperatures
– Pre-existing minerals deform by ductile flow

Metamorphic rocks and


associated environments Metamorphic zones
• Systematic variations in the mineralogy and
often the textures of metamorphic rocks are
related to the variations in the degree of
metamorphism
• Index minerals and metamorphic grade
• Changes in mineralogy occur from regions of
low-grade metamorphism to regions of high-
grade metamorphism

Metamorphic zones in the


Metamorphic zones Northeastern United States
• Index minerals and metamorphic grade
• Certain minerals, called index minerals, are
good indicators of the metamorphic
conditions in which they form
• Migmatites
– Highest grades of metamorphism that is
transitional to igneous rocks
– Contain light bands of igneous components along
with areas of unmelted metamorphic rock

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