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.dt The Project Gutenberg eBook of Common Minerals and Rocks, by William O. Crosby
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Common Minerals and Rocks
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Boston Society of Natural History
GUIDES FOR SCIENCE-TEACHING
No. XII
Common Minerals and Rocks
By WILLIAM O. CROSBY
D. C. HEATH & CO., PUBLISHERS
BOSTON\ \ NEW YORK\ \ CHICAGO
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Copyright
By the Boston Society of Natural History
1881
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INTRODUCTION.
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Minerals and rocks, or the inorganic portions of
the earth, constitute the proper field or subject-matter
of the science of Geology. Now the inorganic earth,
like an animal or plant, may be and is studied in three
quite distinct ways, giving rise to three great divisions
of geology, which, as will be seen, correspond closely
to the main divisions of Biology.
First, we may study the forces now operating upon
and in the earth—the geological agencies—such as
the ocean and atmosphere, rivers, rain and frosts,
earthquakes, volcanoes, hot springs, etc., and observe
the various effects which they produce. We are concerned
here with the dynamics of the earth; and this
is the great division of dynamical geology, corresponding
to physiology among the biological sciences.
Or, second, instead of geological causes, we may
study more particularly geological effects, observing
the different kinds of rocks and of rock-structure produced
by the geological agencies, not only at the
present time, but also during past ages. This method
of study gives us the important division of structural
geology, corresponding to anatomy and morphology.
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All phenomena present two distinct and opposite
aspects or phases which we call cause and effect; and
so in dynamical and structural geology we are really
studying the opposite sides of essentially the same
classes of phenomena. In the first division we study
the causes now in operation and observe their effects;
and then, guided by the light of the experience thus
gained, we turn to the effects produced in the past and
seek to refer them to their causes.
These two divisions together constitute what is
properly known as physiography; and they are both
subordinate to the third great division of geology,—historical
geology,—which corresponds to embryology.
The great object of the geologist is, by studying
the geological formations in regular order, from the
oldest up to the newest, to work out, in their proper
sequence, the events which constitute the earth’s
history; and dynamical and structural geology are
merely introductory chapters, the alphabet, as it were,
which must be learned before we are prepared to read
understandingly the grand story of the geological
record.
Our work in this short course will be limited to the
first two divisions,—i.e., to dynamical and structural
geology. We will attempt, first, a general sketch of
the forces now concerned in the formation of rocks
and rock-structures; and after that we will study the
composition and other characteristics of the common
minerals and rocks.
The scope of this work, and its relations to the whole
field of geology, are more clearly indicated by the following
classification of the geological sciences:—
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{Dynamical Geology {Physical Geology.
{Chemical Geology.
GEOLOGY {Structural Geology {Mineralogy.
{Petrography {Lithology.
{Petrology.
{Historical Geology.
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Dynamical Geology |
⎧Physical Geology. |
⎩Chemical Geology. |
Structural Geology |
⎧Mineralogy. |
⎩Petrography | ⎧Lithology. |
⎩Petrology. |
Historical Geology. |
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Many teachers will desire to fill in some of the details
of the outline sketch presented in this Guide, and for
this purpose the following works are especially recommended:—
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Elements of Geology. By Prof. Joseph Le Conte. 1882.
D. Appleton & Co., New York. Nearly 600 pages.
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Manual of Geology. By Prof. J. D. Dana. Third edition.
1880. 800 pages.
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Text-Book of Geology. By Prof. A. Geikie. 1882. Macmillan
& Co., London. Nearly 1000 pages.
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As a reference-book for mineralogy, the following
treatise is unsurpassed:—
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Text-Book of Mineralogy. By Edward S. Dana. 1883.
John Wiley & Sons, New York.
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And, as an introduction to the study of minerals,
and, through these, to the study of rocks,—
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First Lessons in Minerals. Science Guide No. XIII. By
Mrs. E. H. Richards.
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cannot be too highly recommended. Teachers will
find this little primer of 46 pages invaluable with young
children, and with all who have had no previous training
in chemistry.
As an admirable continuation of the work begun in
these pages, teachers are referred to Professor Shaler’s
“First Book in Geology.” In this our brief sketch of
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the geological agencies is amplified and beautifully
illustrated; and rarely have the wonderful stories of
the river, ocean-beach, glacier, and volcano been told
so effectively. In the chapter on the history of life on
the globe the main outlines of historical geology are
skillfully brought within the comprehension of beginners.
The directions to teachers are fully in accord
with the modern methods and ideas, and are a very
valuable feature of the book.
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DYNAMICAL GEOLOGY.
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When we think of the ocean with its waves, tides,
and currents, of the winds, and of the rain and snow,
and the vast net-work of rivers to which they give rise,
we realize that the energy or force manifested upon the
earth’s surface resides chiefly in the air and water—in
the earth’s fluid envelope and not in its solid crust.
And it would be an easy matter to show that, with the
exception of the tidal waves and currents, which of course
are due chiefly to the attraction of the moon, nearly all
this energy is merely the transformed heat of the sun.
Now the air and water are two great geological agencies,
and therefore the geological effects which they
produce are traceable back to the sun.
Organic matter is another important geological agent;
but all are familiar with the generalization that connects
the energy exhibited by every form of life with the sun;
and, besides, it is scarcely necessary to allude to the obvious
fact that all animals and plants, so far at least as
any display of energy is concerned, are merely differentiated
portions of the earth’s fluid envelope. And so,
if space permitted, it might be shown that, with the
exception of the tides, nearly every form of force
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manifested upon the earth’s surface has its origin in
the sun.
Of this trio of geological agencies operating upon
the earth’s surface and vitalized by the sun—water,
air, and organic matter—the water is by far the most
important, and so it is common to call these collectively
the aqueous agencies. Hence we have solar
agencies and aqueous agencies as synonymous terms.
The aqueous agencies include, on one side, air and
water, or inorganic agencies; and, on the other, animals
and plants, or organic agencies.
Let us notice briefly the operation of these, beginning
with the air and water.
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I. AQUEOUS AGENCIES.
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1. Air and Water, or Inorganic Agencies.
Chemical Erosion.—Attention is invited first to the
specimens numbered 1, 2, 3, and 4. No. 1 is a sound,
fresh piece of the rather common rock, diabase; and
those who are acquainted with minerals will recognize
that the light-colored grains in the rock are feldspar,
and the dark, augite. This specimen came from a
depth in the quarry, and has not been exposed to the
action of the weather.
The second specimen differs from the first, apparently,
as much as possible; and yet, except in being
somewhat finer grained, it was originally of precisely
similar composition and appearance. In fact, it is a
portion of the same rock, but a weathered portion. In
this we can no longer recognize the feldspar and augite
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as such, but both these minerals are very much changed,
while in the place of a strong, hard rock we have an
incoherent friable mass, which is, externally at least,
easily crushed to powder; and with the next step in
the weathering, as we may readily observe in the
natural ledges, the rock is completely disintegrated,
forming a loose earth or soil.
We have two examples of such natural powders in
the specimens numbered 3 and 4; and by washing
these (especially the finer one, No. 4) with water, we
can prove that they consist of an impalpable substance
which we may call clay, and angular grains which we
may call sand. The sand-grains are really portions
of the feldspar not yet entirely changed to clay.
Thus we learn that the result of the exposure of this
hard rock to the weather is that it is reduced to the
condition of sand and clay. What we mean especially
by the weather are moisture and certain constituents
of the air, particularly carbon dioxide.
The action of the weather on the rocks is almost entirely
chemical. With a very few exceptions, the principal
minerals of which rocks are composed, such as
feldspar, hornblende, augite, and mica, are silicates, i.e.,
consist of silicic acid or silica combined with various
bases, especially aluminum, magnesium, iron, calcium,
potassium, and sodium.
Now the silica does not hold all these bases with
equal strength; but carbon dioxide, in the presence
of moisture, is able to take the sodium, potassium,
calcium, and magnesium away from the silica in the
form of carbonates, which, being soluble, are carried
away by the rain-water.
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The silicate of aluminum, with more or less iron,
takes on water at the same time, and remains behind
as a soft, impalpable powder, which is common clay.
In the case of our diabase, continued exposure to the
weather would reduce the whole mass to clay. But
other rocks contain grains of quartz, a hard mineral
which cannot be decomposed, and it always forms sand.
Certain classes of rocks, too, such as the limestones
and some iron-ores, are completely dissolved by water
holding carbon dioxide in solution, and nothing is left
to form soil, except usually a small proportion of insoluble
impurities like sand or clay.
Let us see next how these agents of decay get at
the rocks. Neither water nor air can penetrate the
solid rock or mineral to any considerable extent, so
that practically the action is limited to surfaces, and
whatever multiplies surfaces must favor decomposition.
First, we have the upper surface of the rock where
it is bare, but more especially where it is covered with
soil, for there it is always wet.
All rocks are naturally divided by joints into blocks,
which are frequently more or less regular, and often of
quite small size. Water and air penetrate into these
cracks and decompose the surfaces of the blocks, and
thus the field of their operations is enormously extended.
These rock-blocks sometimes show very
beautifully the progress of the decomposing agents
from the outside inward by concentric layers or shells
of rotten material, which, in the larger blocks, often
envelop a nucleus of the unaltered rock.
It is interesting to observe, too, that these concentric
lines of decay cut off the angles of the original blocks,
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so that the undecomposed nucleus, when it is found,
is approximately spherical instead of cuboidal. Both
these points are well illustrated by specimen No. 2;
for although now nearly spherical, it was originally
perfectly angular, and has become rounded by the
peeling off, in concentric layers, of the decomposed
material, and in most cases several of these layers are
distinctly visible, like the coats of an onion. But by
stripping these off we should discover, in all the larger
balls at least, a solid, spheroidal nucleus, while in the
smaller balls the decomposition has penetrated to the
centre.
In the rocks also we find many imperfect joints and
minute cracks. In cold countries these are extended
and widened by the expansive power of freezing water,
and thus the surfaces of decomposition become constantly
greater.
Nearly all rocks suffer this chemical decomposition
when exposed to the weather, but in some the decay
goes on much faster than in others. Diabase is one of
the rocks which decay most readily; while granite is,
among common rocks, one of those that resist decay
most effectually.
The caverns which are so large and numerous in
most limestone countries are a splendid example of
the solvent action of meteoric waters, being formed
entirely by the dissolving out of the limestone by the
water circulating through the joint cracks. The process
must go on with extreme slowness at first, when
the joints are narrow, and more rapidly as they are
widened and more water is admitted. We get some
idea, too, of the magnitude of the results accomplished
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by these silent and unobtrusive agencies when we reflect
that almost all the loose earth and soil covering
the solid rocks are simply the insoluble residue which
carbon dioxide and water cannot remove. In low latitudes,
where a warm climate accelerates the decay of
the rocks, the soil is usually from 50 to 300 feet deep.
Mechanical Erosion.—On the edge of the land.—Let
us trace next the mechanical action of water and
air upon the land. First we will consider the edge of
the land, where it is washed by the waves of the sea.
Whoever has been on the shore must have noticed
that the sand along the water’s edge is kept in constant
motion by the ebb and flow of the surf.
Where the beach is composed of gravel or shingle
the motion is evident to the ear as well as the eye;
and when the surf is strong, the rattling and grinding
of the pebbles as they are rolled up and down the
beach develops into a roar.
The constant shifting of the grains of sand, pebbles,
and stones is, of course, attended by innumerable collisions,
which are the cause of the noise. Now it is
practically impossible, as we may easily prove by experiment,
to knock or rub two pieces of stone together,
at least so as to produce much noise, without abrading
their surfaces; small particles are detached, and sand
and dust are formed.
That this abrasion actually occurs in the case of the
moving sand is most beautifully shown by the sandblast.
We are to conclude, then, that every time a
pebble, large or small, is rolled up or down the beach
it becomes smaller, and some sand and dust or clay
are formed which are carried off by the water.
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But what are the pebbles originally? This question
is not difficult. A little observation on the beach shows
us that the pebbles are not all equally round and smooth,
but many are more or less angular. And we soon see
that it is possible to select a series showing all gradations
between the most perfectly rounded forms and
angular fragments of rock that are only slightly abraded
on the corners. The three principal members of such a
series are shown in specimens 5, 6, and 7 from the
beach on Marblehead Neck; but equally instructive
specimens can be obtained at many other points on
our coast. It is also observable that the well-rounded
pebbles are much smaller on the average than the angular
blocks.
From these facts we draw the legitimate inference
that the pebbles were all originally angular, and that
the same abrasion which diminishes their size makes
them round and smooth.
A little reflection, too, shows that the rounding of
the angular fragments is a natural and necessary result
of their mutual collisions; for the angles are at the same
time their weakest and most exposed points, and must
wear off faster than the flat or concave surfaces.
Having traced each pebble back to a larger angular
rock-fragment, the question arises, Whence come these
angular blocks?
Behind our gravel-beach, or at its end, we have
usually a cliff of rocks. As we approach this it is distinctly
observable that the angular pebbles are more
numerous, larger, and more angular; and a little
observation shows that these are simply the blocks
produced by jointing, and that the cliff is entirely
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composed of them. In other words, our cliff is a mass
of natural masonry, which chemical agencies, the frost,
and the sea are gradually disintegrating and removing.
As soon as the blocks are brought within reach of the
surf their mutual collisions make them rounder and
smaller; and small round pebbles, sand, and clay are
the final result.
For a more complete account of the formation of
pebbles, teachers are referred to the first or introductory
number of this series of guides, by Prof. Hyatt,
“About Pebbles.”
Where the waves can drive the shingle directly
against the base of the cliff, this is gradually ground
away in the same manner as the loose stones themselves,
sometimes forming a cavern of considerable
depth, but always leaving a smooth, hard surface,
which is very characteristic, and contrasts strongly
with the upper portion of the cliff, which is acted
on only by the rain and frost. A good example
of such a pebble-carved cliff may be seen behind the
beach on the sea-ward side of Marblehead Neck.
The sea acts within very narrow limits vertically, a
few feet or a few yards at most; but the coast-lines of
the globe (including inland lakes and seas) have an
aggregate length of more than 150,000 miles. Hence
it is easy to see that the amount of solid rock ground
to powder in the mill of the ocean-beach annually
must be very considerable.
Mechanical Erosion.—On the surface of the
land.—I next ask attention to the mechanical action
of water upon the surface of the land.
It is a familiar fact that after heavy rains the roadside
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rills carry along much sand and clay (which we
know have been produced by the previous action of
chemical forces), and also frequently small pebbles or
gravel. It is easy to show that in all important respects
the rill differs in size only from brooks and rivers; and
the former afford us fine models of the systems of valleys
worn out during the lapse of ages by rivers. The
turbidity of rivers is often very evident, and in shallow
streams we can sometimes see the pebbles rolled along
by the current.
Now here, just as on the beach, the collisions of
rock-fragments are attended by mutual abrasion, sand
and clay are formed, and the fragments become smaller
and rounder. Our series of pebbles from the beach
might be matched perfectly among the river-gravel.
In mountain streams especially we may often observe
that pebbles of a particular kind of rock become more
numerous, larger, and more angular as we proceed up
stream, until we reach the solid ledge from which they
were derived, showing the same gradation as the beach
pebbles when followed back to the parent cliff.
The pebbles, however, not only grind each other, but
also the solid rocks which form the bed of the streams
in many places, and these are gradually worn away.
When the rocky bed is uneven and the water is swift,
pebbles collect in hollows where eddies are formed, by
which they are kept whirling and turning, and the hollow
is deepened to a pot-hole, while the pebbles, the river’s
tools, are worn out at the same time.
By these observations we learn not only that running
water carries away sand and clay already formed,
but that it also has great power of grinding down hard
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rocks to sand and clay. Of course the pulverized rock
always moves in the same direction as the stream which
carries it; and, in a certain sense, all streams run in
one direction, viz., toward the sea. Therefore the constant
tendency of the rain falling upon the land is to
break up the rocks by chemical and mechanical action
and transport the débris to the sea.
Rivers, as we all know, are continually uniting to
form larger and larger streams; and thus the drainage
of a wide area sometimes, as in the case of the Mississippi
Valley, reaches the sea through a single mouth.
By careful measurements made at the mouth of the Mississippi
it has been shown that the 20,000,000,000,000
cubic feet of water discharged into the Gulf of Mexico
annually carries with it no less than 7,500,000,000
cubic feet of sand, clay, and dissolved mineral matter;
and this, spread over the whole Mississippi basin, would
form a layer a little more than 1/5000 of a foot in thickness.
So that we may conclude that the surface of the
continent is being cut down on the average about one
foot in five thousand years.
We can only allude in passing to the very important
geological action of water in the solid state, as in glaciers
and icebergs. The moisture precipitated from
the atmosphere, and falling as rain, makes ordinary
rivers; but falling in the form of snow in cold regions,
where more snow falls than is melted, the excess accumulates
and is gradually compacted to ice, which,
like water, yields to the enormous pressure of its own
mass and flows toward lower levels. When the ice-river
reaches the sea it breaks off in huge blocks, which
float away as icebergs. Moving ice, like moving water,
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is a powerful agent of erosion; and the glacial marks
or scratches observable upon the ledges everywhere
in the Northern States and Canada attest the magnitude
of the ice-action at a comparatively recent period.
We have already noticed incidentally the powerful
disintegrating action of water where it freezes in the
joints and pores of the rocks; and it is probable that
it thus facilitates the destruction of the rocks in cold
countries nearly as much as the higher temperature
and greater rain-fall do in warm countries.
Our observations up to this point show us that erosion,
by which we mean the breaking up by chemical
and mechanical action of the rocks of the land and the
transportation of the débris into the sea, is one great
result accomplished by the inorganic aqueous agencies.
Mechanical Deposition.—Next let us notice what
becomes of all this vast amount of clay, sand, and gravel
after it is washed into the ocean. By taking up a glass
of turbid water from our roadside rill, and observing
that as soon as the water is undisturbed the sand and
clay begin to settle, we learn that the solid matter is
held in suspension by the motion of the water. But
it does not remain in suspension long after being washed
into the sea, for otherwise the sea would, in the course
of time, become turbid for long distances from shore;
and it is a well-known fact that the sea-water is usually
clear and free from sensible turbidity close along shore
and even near the mouths of large rivers, while at a
distance of only 50 or 100 miles we find the transparency
of the central ocean.
Putting these facts together, we see that the ocean,
nothwithstanding the ceaseless and often violent undulations
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of its surface, must be as a whole a vast body
of still water; and to the reflecting mind the almost
perfect tranquillity of the ocean is one of its most impressive
features. For it is in striking contrast, in this
respect, with the more mobile aerial ocean above it.
We have got hold, now, of two facts of great geological
importance: (1) The débris washed off the land
by waves and rivers into the still water of the ocean
very soon settles to the bottom; and (2) it nearly all
settles on that part of the ocean-floor near the land.
And now we have in view the second great office
of the inorganic aqueous agencies,—deposition, the
counterpart or complement of erosion.
The land is the great theatre of erosion and the sea
of deposition; the rocks which are constantly wasting
away on the former are as constantly renewed in the
latter.
We will now observe the process of deposition a little
more closely. Each of these two bottles contains the
same amount of fine yellow clay, but in one the water
is fresh, and in the other it is salt. At the beginning
of the lesson, as you may have observed, I brought the
clay in both bottles into suspension by violent agitation,
and since then they have remained undisturbed.
The main point is that the salt water has become quite
clear, while the fresh water is still distinctly turbid,
showing that the salt favors the rapid deposition of the
clay. At the second lecture, a week later, these two
bottles, yet undisturbed, were exhibited, and the fresh
water seen to be still sensibly turbid. The fact is, the
clay is not held in suspension wholly by the motion of
the water; but, just as in the case of dust in the atmosphere,
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a small portion of the medium is condensed
around or adheres to each solid particle, i.e., each
clay particle in our experiment has an atmosphere of
water which moves with it and buoys it up. Now the
effect of the salt is to diminish the adhesion of the
water to the particles, i.e., to diminish their atmospheres,
and consequently their buoyancy. The diminished
adhesion of the salt water is well shown by the
smaller drops which it forms on a glass rod.
The geological importance of this principle is very
great; for it is undoubtedly largely to the saltness of
the sea that we owe its transparency, and the fact that
the fine, clayey sediment from the land, like the coarse,
is deposited near the shore.
This bottle of fresh water contains some fine gravel,
coarse sand, fine sand, and clay. By agitating the
water, all this material is brought into suspension.
Now, suddenly placing the bottle in a state of rest, we
observe that the gravel falls to the bottom almost instantly,
followed quickly by the coarse sand, and very soon
afterward by the fine sand; and then there appears to
be a pause, the fine particles of clay all remain in suspension;
but finally, when the water is quite motionless,
they begin to settle; they fall very slowly, however,
and the water will not be clear for hours.
This is a very instructive experiment. We learn
from it:
First, that the power of the water to hold particles
in suspension is inversely proportional to the size of
the particles;
Second, that all materials deposited in water are assorted
according to size;
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Third, and this is one of the most important facts in
geology, all water-deposited sediments are arranged in
horizontal layers, i.e., are stratified. And we have now
traced to its conclusion, though very briefly, the process
of the formation of one great division of stratified rocks,—the
mechanically-formed or fragmental rocks. These
are so called because the clay, sand, and gravel are,
in every instance, fragments of pre-existing rocks; and
because the formation, transportation, and especially
the deposition of these fragments, are the work chiefly
or entirely of mechanical forces.
Chemical Deposition.—It is a well-known fact that
the sea holds in solution vast amounts of common salt
as well as many other substances; and analyses of
river-waters show that dissolved minerals derived from
the chemical decomposition of the rocks of the land are
being constantly carried into the sea.
Portions of the sea which are cut off from the main
body, and which are gradually drying up, like the
Great Salt Lake, Dead Sea, and Caspian Sea, become
saturated solutions of the various dissolved minerals,
and these are slowly deposited. This process is very
nicely illustrated along our shores in summer, where,
during storms, salt-water spray is thrown above the
reach of the tides, and, collecting in hollows in the
rocks, gradually dries up, leaving behind a crust of salt.
When the sea lays down matter which it held in suspension,
we call the process mechanical deposition, and
the result is mechanically-formed rocks.
But when it lays down matter which it held in solution,
we call the process chemical deposition, and the result
is chemically-formed rocks.
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The principal substances which the sea deposits
chemically are common salt, forming beds of rock-salt;
sulphate of calcium, forming beds of gypsum; carbonate
of calcium, forming beds of limestone; and the double
carbonate of calcium and magnesium, forming beds of
dolomite.
Inorganic deposition, like inorganic erosion, is both
chemical and mechanical.
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2. Animals and Plants, or Organic Agencies.
We turn now to the consideration of the organic
agencies. And I will merely allude in passing to the
vast importance of the fossil organic remains found
in the stratified rocks as marks by which to determine
the relative ages of the formations.
As regards the destruction of rocks—erosion—plants
and animals are almost powerless; but in the role of
rock-makers they play a very important part, being very
efficient agents of deposition.
Formation of Coals and Bitumens.—Specimen
No. 8 is an example of peat from the vicinity of Boston;
but just as good specimens may be obtained in
thousands of places in this and other States.
The general physical conditions under which peat is
formed are familiar facts. We require simply low, level
land, covered with a thin sheet of water and abundant
vegetation; in other words, a marsh or swamp. If
plants decay on the dry land, the decomposition is
complete; they are burned up by the oxygen of the
air to carbon dioxide and water just as surely as if
.pn +1 // 022.png
they had been thrown into a furnace, though less
rapidly, and nothing is returned to the soil but what
had been taken from it by the plants during their
growth. But if the plants decay under water, as in
a peat-marsh or bog, the decay is incomplete, and
most of the carbon of the wood is left behind. Now,
if this incomplete combustion of vegetable tissues takes
place in a charcoal-pit, where the wood is out of contact
with air from being covered with earth, we call the
carbonaceous product charcoal; but if under the water
of a marsh, in Nature’s laboratory, we call the product
peat. Peat is simply a natural charcoal; and, just as in
ordinary charcoal, its vegetable origin is always perfectly
evident. But when the deposit becomes thicker, and
especially when it is buried under thick formations
of other rocks, like sand and clay, the great pressure
consolidates the peat; it becomes gradually more mineralized
and shining, shows the vegetable tissues less distinctly,
becomes more nearly pure carbon, and we call
it in succession lignite, bituminous coal, and anthracite.
This is, briefly, the way in which all varieties of coal,
as well as the more solid kinds of bitumen, like asphaltum,
are formed. But the lighter forms of bitumen,
such as petroleum and naphtha, are derived mainly,
if not entirely, from the partial decomposition of animal
tissues. These, it is well known, decay much more
readily than vegetable tissues; and the water of an ordinary
marsh or lake contains sufficient oxygen for
their complete and rapid decomposition. In the
deeper parts of the ocean, however, the conditions are
very different, for recent researches have shown, contrary
to the old idea, that the deep sea holds an abundant
.pn +1 // 023.png
fauna. All grades of animal life, from the highest
to the lowest, have need of a constant supply of oxygen.
On the land vegetation is constantly returning to
the air the oxygen consumed by animals, but in the
abysses of the ocean vegetable life is scarce or wanting;
and hence it must result that over these greater than
continental areas countless myriads of animals are living
habitually on short rations of oxygen, and in water well
charged with carbon dioxide, the product of animal
respiration. As a consequence, when these animals die
their tissues do not find the oxygen essential for their
perfect decomposition, and in the course of time
become buried, in a half-decayed state, in the ever-increasing
sediments of the ocean-floor.
It is important to observe that an abundance of organic
matter decaying under water is not the only condition
essential to the formation of beds of coal and
bitumen; for this condition is realized in the luxuriant
growth of sea-weeds fringing the coast in every quarter
of the globe; and yet coals and bitumens are rarely of
sea-shore origin. These organic products, even under
the most favorable circumstances, accumulate with
extreme slowness; far more slowly, as a rule, than the
ordinary mechanical sediments, like sand and clay,
with which they are mixed, and in which they are often
completely lost. Consequently, although the deposition
of the carbonized remains of plants and animals is
taking place in nearly all seas, lakes, and marshes, it is
only in those places where there is little or no mechanical
sediment that they can predominate so as to build
up beds pure enough to be called coal or bitumen. In
all other cases we get merely more or less carbonaceous
.pn +1 // 024.png
sand or clay. Now these especially favorable localities
will manifestly not be often found along the seashore,
where we have strewn the sand and clay brought
down by rivers or washed off the land directly by
the ever-active surf; but they must exist in the central
portions of the ocean, where there is almost no mechanical
sediment and yet an abundance of life, and in
swamps and marshes, where there is scarcely sufficient
water to cover the vegetation, and no waves or currents
to wash down the soil from the surrounding hills.
Formation of Iron-ores.—The iron-ores are
another class of rocks which are formed only through
the agency of organic matter. Iron is an abundant
and wide-spread element in the earth’s crust, and, but
for the intervention of life, we might say that, while
there is iron everywhere, there is not much of it in
any one place, since it is originally very thinly diffused.
All rocks and soils contain iron, but it is mainly in the
form of the peroxide, in which state it is entirely insoluble,
and hence cannot be soaked out of the soil by
the rain-water and concentrated by the evaporation of
the water at lower levels in ponds and marshes, as a
soluble substance like salt would be. If carried off
with the sand and clay, by the mechanical action of
water, it remains uniformly mixed with them, and there
is no tendency to its separation and concentration so
as to form a true iron-ore.
But what water cannot do alone is accomplished
very readily when the water is aided by decaying organic
matter, which is always hungry for oxygen, being, in
the language of the chemist, a powerful reducing agent.
The soil, in most places, has a superficial stratum of
.pn +1 // 025.png
vegetable mould or half-decayed vegetation. The rainwater
percolates through this and dissolves more or
less of the organic matter, which is thus carried down
into the sand and clay beneath and brought in contact
with the ferric oxide, from which it takes a certain
proportion of oxygen, reducing the ferric to the ferrous
oxide. At the same time the vegetation is burned up
by the oxygen thus obtained, forming carbon dioxide,
which immediately combines with the ferrous oxide,
forming carbonate of iron, which, being soluble under
these conditions, is carried along by the water as it
gradually finds its way by subterranean drainage to the
bottom of the valley and emerges in a swamp or marsh.
Here one of two things will happen: If the marsh
contains little or no decaying vegetation, then as soon
as the ferrous carbonate brought down from the hills
is exposed to the air it is decomposed, the carbon
dioxide escapes, and the iron, taking on oxygen from
the air, returns to its original ferric condition; and
being then quite insoluble, it is deposited as a loose,
porous, earthy mass, commonly known as bog-iron-ore,
which becomes gradually more solid and finally
even crystalline through the subsequent action of
heat and pressure. When first deposited, the ferric
oxide is combined with water or hydrated, and is
then known as limonite (specimen No. 12); at a
later period the water is expelled, and we call the ore
hematite (specimen No. 13); and at a still later age
it loses part of its oxygen, becomes magnetic and more
crystalline, and is then known as magnetite (specimen
No. 14). Thus it is seen that the iron-ores, as we
pass from bog-limonite to magnetite, form a natural
.pn +1 // 026.png
series similar to and parallel with that afforded by the
coals as we pass from peat to graphite.
If the drainage from the hills is into a marsh containing
an abundance of decaying vegetation, i.e., if peat
is forming there, the ferrous carbonate, in the presence
of the more greedy organic matter, will be unable to
obtain oxygen from the air; and as the evaporation of
the water goes on, it will sooner or later become saturated
with this salt, and the latter will be deposited.
Here we find an explanation of a fact often observed
by geologists, viz., that the carbonate iron-ores are
usually associated with beds of coal.
The formation of the iron-ores, like that of the coals
and bitumens, is a slow process; and the ores, like the
coals, etc., will be pure only where there is a complete
absence of mechanical sediment, a condition that is
realized most nearly in marshes.
Formation of Limestone, Diatomaceous Earth, etc.—Marine
animals take from the sea-water certain mineral
substances, especially silica and carbonate of
calcium, to form their skeletons. Silica is used only
by the lowest organisms, such as Radiolaria, Sponges,
and the minute unicellular plants, Diatoms. The principal
animals secreting carbonate of calcium are Corals
and Mollusks. These hard parts of the organisms
remain undissolved after death; and over portions of
the ocean-floor where there is but little of other kinds
of sediment they form the main part of the deposits,
and in the course of ages build up very extensive formations
which we call diatomaceous earth or tripolite,
if the organisms are siliceous, or limestone if they are
calcareous. A very satisfactory account of the formation
.pn +1 // 027.png
of limestone on a stupendous scale by the
polyps in coral reefs and islands is contained in No.
IV. of this series of guides.
The rocks here considered may be, and, as we have
already seen, sometimes are, deposited in a purely
chemical way, without the aid of life; and it is important
to observe that in no case do the organisms make
the silica and carbonate of calcium of their skeletons,
but they simply appropriate and reduce to the solid state
what exists ready made in solution in the sea-water.
These minerals, and others, as we know, are produced
by the decomposition of the rocks of the land, and are
being constantly carried into the sea by rivers; and,
if there were no animals in the sea, these processes
would still go on until the sea-water became saturated
with these substances, when their precipitation as
limestone, etc., would necessarily follow. Hence it is
clear that all the animals do is to effect the precipitation
of certain minerals somewhat sooner than it would
otherwise occur; so that from a geological standpoint
the differences between chemical and organic deposition
are not great.
This section of our subject may be summarized as
follows: Animals and plants contribute to the formation
of rocks in three distinct ways:—
1. During their growth they deoxidize carbon dioxide
and water, and reduce to the solid state in their tissues
carbon and the permanent gases oxygen, hydrogen, and
nitrogen; and after death, through the accumulation
of the half-decayed tissues in favorable localities,—marshes,
etc.,—these elements are added to the solid
crust of the earth in the form of coal and bitumen.
.pn +1 // 028.png
2. During the decomposition, i.e., oxidation, of the
organic tissues, the iron existing everywhere in the soil
is partially deoxidized, and, being thus rendered soluble,
is removed by rain-water and concentrated in low places,
forming beds of iron-ore.
3. Through the agency of marine organisms, certain
mineral substances are being constantly removed from
the sea-water and deposited upon the ocean floor,
forming various calcareous and siliceous rocks.
I now bring our study of the aqueous or superficial
agencies to a conclusion by noting once more that the
great geological results accomplished by air, water, and
organic matter or life are: (1) Erosion, or the wearing
away of the surface of the land; and (2) Deposition,
or the formation from the débris of the eroded land of
two great classes of stratified rocks,—the mechanically
formed or fragmental rocks, and the chemically
and organically formed rocks.
.sp 4
.h3
II. IGNEOUS AGENCIES.
.sp 2
We pass next to a very brief consideration of operations
that originate below the earth’s surface. The
records of deep mines and artesian wells show that the
temperature of the ground always increases downwards
from the surface; and the much higher temperatures of
hot springs and volcanoes show that the heat continues
to increase to a great depth, and is not a merely superficial
phenomenon. The observed rate of increase is
not uniform, but it seldom varies far from the average,
which is about 1° Fahr. per 53 feet of vertical descent,
or, in round numbers, 100° per mile. This rate, if
.pn +1 // 029.png
continued, would give a very high temperature at points
only a few miles below the surface; and until within a
few years the idea was generally accepted by geologists
that the increase of temperature is sensibly uniform
for an indefinite distance downward; that in the central
regions of the earth the temperature is far higher
than anything we can conceive, and that everywhere
below a depth of 20 to 40 miles the temperature is
above the fusing-point of all rocks; and hence that
the earth is an incandescent liquid globe covered by
a thin shell or crust of cold, solid rock.
Our limited space will not permit us to enter into a
discussion of the condition of the earth’s interior, and
I will merely point out in a few sentences the position
occupied by geologists at the present time. The
reasoning of Thompson has shown that the temperature
cannot increase downward at a uniform rate, but
at a constantly and rapidly diminishing rate; and
that everywhere below a depth of 300 miles the temperature
is probably sensibly the same, and nowhere,
probably, above 8000° to 10,000° Fahr.
Unlike water, all rocks contract on solidifying and
expand on melting, and consequently the high pressures
to which they are subjected in the earth’s interior—10,000,000
to 20,000,000 pounds per square
inch—must raise their fusing-points enormously, and
the probabilities are that they are solid, in spite of the
high temperature. But Thompson and Darwin have
shown us farther that the phenomena of the oceanic
tides could not be what they are known to be if the
earth were any less rigid than a globe of solid steel;
while Hopkins has proved that the astronomical phenomena
.pn +1 // 030.png
of precession and nutation could not be what
they are if the earth’s crust were less than 800 or 1000
miles thick. Putting these considerations together,
geologists are almost universally agreed that, while the
earth has an incandescent interior, it is still continuously
solid from centre to circumference, with the
exception of a thin plastic stratum at a depth not
exceeding 40 or 50 miles, which forms the seat of volcanic
action.
The earth is not only a very hot body, but it is rotating
through almost absolutely cold space, and therefore
must be a cooling body. But, except at the very
beginning of the cooling, the loss of heat has gone on
almost entirely from the interior; and since cooling
means contraction, the heated interior must be constantly
tending to shrink away from the cold external
crust.
Of course no actual separation between the crust
and interior or nucleus can take place, but there is no
doubt that the crust is left unsupported to a certain
extent, and it must then behave like an arch with a
radius of 4000 miles, and the result is an enormous
horizontal or tangential pressure.
This lateral pressure in the earth’s crust is one of the
most important and most generally accepted facts in
geology, and lies at the bottom of many geological theories.
According to what seems to me to be the most
probable theory of the origin of continents and ocean-basins,
they are broad upward and downward bendings
or arches into which the crust is thrown by the tangential
pressure. Finally, the strain becomes great
enough to crush the crust along those lines where it is
.pn +1 // 031.png
weakest. When the crust is thus mashed up by horizontal
pressure, a mountain range is formed, the crust
becomes enormously thicker, and a weak place becomes
a strong one.
During the formation of mountains the stratified
rocks, which were originally horizontal, are thrown into
folds or arches, and tipped up at all possible angles;
they are fractured and faults produced; and by the
immense pressure the structure known as slaty cleavage
is developed. In fact, a vast amount and variety of
structures are produced during the growth of a mountain
range.
These great earth-movements are not always perfectly
smooth and steady, but they are accompanied by
slipping or crushing now and then; and, as a result
of the shock thus produced, a swift vibratory movement
or jar, which we know as an earthquake, runs through
the earth’s crust.
Extensive fissures are also formed, opening down to
the regions where the rocks are liquid or plastic, and
through these the melted rocks flow up to or toward
the surface. That portion which flows out on the
surface builds up a volcanic cone, while that which
cools and solidifies below the surface, in the fissures,
forms dikes. Thus among the igneous or eruptive
rocks we have two great classes,—the dike rocks and
the volcanic rocks.
It is important to observe that all these subterranean
operations—the formation of continents, of mountain-ranges
with all their attendant phenomena of folds,
faults and cleavage, and every form and phase of earthquake
and volcanic activity—depend upon or originate
.pn +1 // 032.png
in the interior heat of the earth. And over against the
superficial or aqueous agencies, originating in the solar
heat and producing the stratified or sedimentary rocks,
we set the subterranean or igneous agencies originating
in the central heat, and producing the unstratified or
eruptive rocks.
.pn +1 // 033.png
.pb
.sp 4
.h2
STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY.
.pm ic chapter_title.png 100px
.sp 2
In geology, just as in biology, there are two ways of
studying structure,—the small way and the large way.
In the case of an organism, we may select a single part
or organ, and, disregarding its external form and relations
to other parts, observe its composition and minute
structure, the various forms and arrangements of the
cells, etc. This is histology, and it is the complement
of that larger method of studying structure which is
ordinarily understood by anatomy.
The divisions of structural geology corresponding to
histology and anatomy are lithology and petrology.
Lithology is an in-door science; we use the microscope
largely, and work with hand specimens or thin sections
of the rocks, observing the composition and those
small structural features which go under the general
name of texture.
In petrology, on the other hand, we consider the
larger kinds of rock-structure, such as stratification,
jointing, folds, faults, cleavage, etc.; and it is essentially
an out-door science, since to study it to the
best advantage we must have, not hand specimens,
but ledges, cliffs, railway-cuttings, gorges, and mountains.
.pn +1 // 034.png
.sp 4
.h3
LITHOLOGY.
.sp 2
A rock is any mineral, or mixture of minerals, occurring
in masses of considerable size. This distinction
of size is the only one that can be made between rocks
and minerals, and that is very indefinite. A rock,
whether composed of one mineral or several, is always
an aggregate; and therefore no single crystal or mineral-grain
can properly be called a rock.
Before proceeding to study particularly the various
kinds of rocks, a little more preliminary work should
be done. As already intimated, the more important
characteristics of rocks may be grouped under two
general heads,—composition and texture.
.sp 2
.h4
Composition of Rocks.
Rocks are properly defined as large masses or aggregates
of mineral matter, consisting in some cases
of one and in other cases of several mineral species.
Hence it is clear that the composition of rocks is of
two kinds: chemical and mineralogical; for the various
chemical elements are first combined to form
minerals, and then the minerals are combined to form
rocks.
Of course those minerals and elements which can be
described as principal or important rock-constituents
must be the common minerals and elements. Now it
is a very important and convenient fact that although
chemists recognize about sixty-five elementary substances,
and these are combined to form nearly one
thousand mineral species, yet both the common elements
and the common minerals are few in number.
.pn +1 // 035.png
So that, although it is very desirable and even
necessary for the student of lithology to know something
of chemistry and mineralogy, it by no means follows
that he or she must be master of those sciences.
A knowledge of the chemical and physical characteristics
of a few common minerals is all that is absolutely
essential, though it may be added that an excess of
wisdom in these directions is no disadvantage.
.sp 2
.h5
Chemical Composition of Rocks.
The elementary substances of which rocks are chiefly
composed, which make up the main mass of the earth
so far as we are acquainted with it, number only
fourteen:—
Non-Metallic or Acidic Elements.—Oxygen, silicon,
carbon, sulphur, chlorine, phosphorus, and fluorine.
Metallic or Basic Elements.—Aluminum, magnesium,
calcium, iron, sodium, potassium, and hydrogen.
The elements are named in each group in about the
order of their relative abundance; and to give some
idea of the enormous differences in this respect it may
be stated that two of the elements—oxygen and silicon—form
more than half of the earth’s crust.
Silicon, calcium, and fluorine, although exceedingly
abundant, are also very difficult to obtain in the free or
uncombined state, and specimens large enough to exhibit
to a class would be very expensive. With these
exceptions, however, examples of these common rock-forming
elements are easily obtained.
My purpose in calling attention to this point is simply
to suggest that the proper way to begin the study
of minerals and rocks with children is to first familiarize
.pn +1 // 036.png
them with the elements of which they are composed.
The most important thing to be known about any mineral
is its chemical composition; and when a child is
told that a mineral—corundum, for example—is composed
of oxygen and aluminum, he should have a distinct
conception of the properties of each of those
elements, for otherwise corundum is for him a mere
compound of names.
It is very important, too, if the pupil has not already
studied chemistry, that he should be led to some comprehension
of the nature of chemical union and of the
difference between a chemical compound and a mechanical
mixture. For this purpose a few simple experiments
(the details of which would be out of place
here) with the more common and familiar elements
will be sufficient. Mrs. Richard’s “First Lessons in
Minerals” should be introduced here.
.sp 2
.h5
Mineralogical Composition of Rocks.
The fourteen elements named above are combined to
form about fifty minerals with which the student of
geology should be acquainted; but not more than one-half
of these are of the first importance. It is desired
to lay especial emphasis upon the importance of a perfect
familiarity with these few common minerals.
There is nothing else in the whole range of geology so
easily acquired which is at the same time so valuable;
for it is entirely impossible to comprehend the definitions
of rocks, or to recognize rocks certainly and scientifically,
unless we are acquainted with their constituent
minerals.
With one or two exceptions, these common rock-forming
minerals may be easily distinguished by their
.pn +1 // 037.png
physical characters alone, so that their certain recognition
is a matter of the simplest observation, and entirely
within the capacity of young children. Furthermore,
being common, specimens of these minerals are very
easily obtained, so that there is no reason why teachers
should not here adopt the best method and place a
specimen of each mineral in the hands of each pupil.
Typical examples, large enough to show the characteristics
well, ought not to cost, on the average, over two
cents apiece.
A MINERAL is an inorganic body having theoretically
a definite chemical composition, and usually a regular
geometric form.
The Principal Characteristics of Minerals.—These
may be grouped under the following general
heads:—
(1) Composition, (2) Crystalline form, (3) Hardness,
(4) Specific gravity, (5) Lustre, (6) Color and Streak.
1. Composition.—This, according to the definition
of a mineral, ought to be definite, and expressible by a
chemical formula. When it is not so, we usually consider
that the mineral is partially decomposed, or that
we are dealing with a mixture of minerals. It is well
to impress upon the mind of the pupil the important
fact that the more fundamental properties of the elements,
such as specific gravity and lustre, are not lost
when they combine, but may be traced in the compounds.
In other words, the properties of minerals
are, in a very large degree, the average of the properties
of the elements of which they are composed; minerals
in which heavy metallic elements predominate
being heavy and metallic, and vice versa.
.pn +1 // 038.png
To fully appreciate this point it is only necessary
to compare a mineral like galenite—a common ore
of lead, and containing nearly 87 per cent. of that
heavy metal; or hematite (specimen 13), containing
70 per cent. of another heavy metal, iron—with
quartz (specimen 15), which is composed in nearly
equal parts of oxygen and silicon, two typical non-metallic
elements. Many minerals contain water,
i.e., are hydrated. Now water, whether we consider
the liquid or solid state, is one of the lightest and
softest of mineral constituents; and it is a very important
fact that hydrated minerals are invariably lighter
and usually softer than anhydrous species of otherwise
similar composition. Other striking illustrations of this
principle will be pointed out in the descriptions of the
minerals which follow.
2. Crystalline form.—A crystal is bounded by plane
surfaces symmetrically arranged with reference to certain
imaginary lines passing through its centre and
called axes. Crystals of the same species are always
constant in the angles between like planes, while similar
angles usually vary in different species; so that each
species has its own peculiar form.
“Besides external symmetry of form, crystallization
produces also regularity of internal structure, and often
of fracture. This regularity of fracture, or tendency to
break or cleave along certain planes, is called cleavage.
The surface afforded by cleavage is often smooth and
brilliant (see specimens 17, 18, and 21), and is always
parallel with some external plane of the crystal. It
should be understood that the cleavage lamellæ are
not in any sense present before they are made to appear
by fracture.”—(Dana.)
.pn +1 // 039.png
Crystals are arranged in six systems, based upon the
number and relations of the axes, as follows:—
Isometric System.—Three equal axes crossing at
right angles. Example, cube.
Tetragonal System.—Two axes equal, third unequal,
all crossing at right angles. Example, square
prism.
Orthorhombic System.—Three unequal axes, but
intersections all at right angles. Example, rhombic
prism.
Monoclinic System.—Three unequal axes, one
intersection oblique. Example, oblique rhombic
prism.
Triclinic System.—Three unequal axes, all crossing
obliquely. Example, oblique rhomboidal prism.
Hexagonal System.—Three equal axes lying in
one plane and intersecting at angles of 60°, and a
fourth axis crossing each of these at right angles and
longer or shorter. Example, hexagonal prism.
By the truncation and bevelment of the angles and
edges of these fundamental forms a vast variety of secondary
forms are produced. The limits of the guide
will not permit us to follow this topic farther; but it
may be added that for the proper elucidation of even
the simpler crystalline forms the teacher should be
provided with a set of wooden crystal models and
Dana’s “Text-Book of Mineralogy.”
The crystallization of a mineral may be manifested
in two ways: first, by the regularity of its internal structure
or molecular arrangement, as shown by cleavage
and the polarization of transmitted light; and, second,
by the regularity of external form which follows, under
.pn +1 // 040.png
favorable conditions, as a necessary consequence of
symmetry in the arrangement of the molecules.
When a mineral is entirely devoid of crystalline
structure, both externally and internally, it is said to be
amorphous.
Perfect and distinct crystals are the rare exception,
most mineral specimens being simply aggregates of imperfect
crystals. In such cases, and when the mineral
is amorphous, the structure of the mass may
be:—
Columnar or fibrous.
Lamellar, foliaceous, or micaceous.
Granular.—When the grains or crystalline particles
are invisible to the naked eye the mineral is
called impalpable, compact, or massive.
And the external form of the mass may be:—
Botryoidal, having grape-like surfaces.
Stalactitic, forming stalactites or pendant columns.
Amygdaloidal or Concretionary, forming separate
globular masses in the enclosing rock.
Dendritic, branching or arborescent.
3. Hardness.—By the hardness of a mineral we
mean the resistance which it offers to abrasion. But
hardness is a purely relative term, calcite, for example,
being hard compared with talc, but very soft compared
with quartz. Hence mineralogists have found it
necessary to select certain minerals to be used as a
standard of comparison for all others, and known as
the scale of hardness. These are arranged at nearly
equal intervals all the way from the softest mineral to
the hardest, as follows:—
.pn +1 // 041.png
.sp 2
.h4
Scale of Hardness.
.nf b
(1) Talc.
(2) Gypsum.
(3) Calcite.
(4) Fluorite.
(5) Apatite.
(6) Orthoclase.
(7) Quartz.
(8) Topaz or Beryl.
(9) Corundum.
(10) Diamond.
.nf-
If a mineral scratches calcite and is scratched by
fluorite, we say its hardness is between 3 and 4, perhaps
3.5; if it neither scratches nor is scratched by
orthoclase, its hardness is 6; and so on. There are
very few minerals harder than quartz, and hence the
first seven members of the scale are sufficient for all
ordinary purposes; and these are all included in the
series of specimens accompanying this Guide.
Although it is desirable to be acquainted with the
scale of hardness, and to understand how to use it, still
the student will learn, after a little practice, that almost
as good results may be obtained much more conveniently
by the use of his thumb-nail and a good knife-blade
or file. Talc and gypsum are easily scratched
with the nail; calcite and fluorite yield easily to the
knife or file, apatite with more difficulty; while orthoclase
is near the limit of the hardness of ordinary steel,
and quartz is entirely beyond it.
4. Specific Gravity.—The specific gravity of a
mineral, by which we mean its weight as compared
with the weight of an equal volume of water, is determined
by weighing it first in air and then in water, and
dividing the weight in air by the difference of the two
weights. Minerals exhibit a wide range in specific
gravity; from petroleum, which floats on water, to gold,
.pn +1 // 042.png
which is nearly twenty times heavier than water. Although
this is one of the most important properties of
minerals, yet, being more difficult to measure than
hardness, it is less valuable as an aid in distinguishing
species. One can with practice, however, estimate the
density of a mineral pretty closely by lifting it in the
hand.
5. Lustre.—Of all the properties of minerals depending
on their relations to light the most important
is lustre, by which we mean the quality of the light reflected
by a mineral as determined by the character or
minute structure of its surface. Two kinds of lustre,
the metallic and vitreous, are of especial importance;
in fact all other kinds are merely varieties of these.
The metallic lustre is the lustre of all true metals, as
copper and tin, and characterizes nearly all minerals in
which metallic elements predominate. The vitreous
lustre is best exemplified in glass, but belongs to most
minerals composed chiefly of non-metallic elements.
Metallic minerals are always opaque, but vitreous minerals
are often transparent.
Other kinds of lustre are the adamantine (the lustre
of diamond), resinous, pearly, and silky. When a
mineral has no lustre, like chalk, it is said to be dull.
It should be made clear to children that lustre and
color are entirely distinct and independent. Thus,
iron, copper, gold, silver, and lead are all metallic;
while white or colorless quartz, black tourmaline, green
beryl, red garnet, etc., are all vitreous. Generally
speaking, any color may occur with any lustre.
6. Color and Streak.—The colors of minerals are
of two kinds,—essential and non-essential. By the
.pn +1 // 043.png
essential color in any case we mean the color of
the mineral itself in its purest state. The non-essential
colors, on the other hand, are chiefly the colors of the
impurities contained in the minerals.
Metallic minerals, which are always opaque, usually
have essential colors; but vitreous minerals, which are
always more or less transparent, often have non-essential
colors. The explanation is this: In opaque minerals
we can only see the impurities immediately on the
surface, and these are, as a rule, not enough to affect
its color; but in diaphanous minerals we look into the
specimen and see impurities below the surface, and
thus bring into view, in many cases, sufficient impurity
so that its color drowns that of the mineral.
To prove this we have only to take any mineral (serpentine
is a good example in our series) having a non-essential
color, and make it opaque by pulverizing it or
abrading its surface, when the non-essential color, the
color of the impurity, immediately disappears; just as
water, yellow with suspended clay, becomes white when
whipped into foam, and thus made opaque.
What we understand by the streak of a mineral is its
essential color, the color of its powder; and it is so
called because the powder is most readily observed by
scratching the surface of the mineral, and thereby pulverizing
a minute portion of it. The streak and hardness
are thus determined at the same time. The streak
of soft minerals is easily determined by rubbing them
on any white surface of suitable hardness, as paper,
porcelain, or Arkansas stone.
Essential and Accessory Minerals.—Lithologists,
regarding minerals as constituents of rocks, divide them
.pn +1 // 044.png
into two great classes: the essential and the accessory.
The essential constituents of a rock are those minerals
which are essential to the definition of the rock. For
example, we cannot properly define granite without
naming quartz and orthoclase; hence these are essential
constituents of granite; and if either of these minerals
were removed from granite it would not be
granite any longer, but some other rock. But other
minerals, like tourmaline and garnet, may be indifferently
present or absent; it is granite still; hence they
are merely accidental or accessory constituents. They
determine the different varieties of granite, while the
essential minerals make the species.
This classification, of course, is not absolute, for in
many cases the same mineral forms an essential constituent
of one rock and an accessory constituent of
another. Thus, quartz is essential in granite, but accessory
in diorite.
Principal Minerals constituting Rocks.—Having
studied in a general way the more important characteristics
of minerals, brief descriptions of the chief
rock-forming species are next in order. We will notice
first and principally those minerals occurring chiefly as
essential constituents of rocks.
1. Graphite.—Essentially pure carbon, though often
mixed with a little iron oxide. Crystallizes in hexagonal
system, but usually foliated, granular, or massive.
Hardness, 1-2, being easily scratched with the nail.
Sp. gr., 2.1-2.3. Lustre, metallic; an exception to the
rule that acidic elements have non-metallic or vitreous
lustres. Streak, black and shining (see pencil-mark on
white paper). Color, iron-black. Slippery or greasy
.pn +1 // 045.png
feel. Every black-lead pencil is a specimen of
graphite. Specimen 9.
The different kinds of mineral coal are, geologically,
as we have seen, closely related to graphite, but they
are such familiar substances that they need not be described
here.
2. Halite (common salt).—Chloride of sodium:
chlorine, 60.7; sodium, 39.3; = 100. Isometric system,
usually forming cubes. Hardness, 2.5, a little
harder than the nail. Sp. gr., 2.1-2.6. Lustre, vitreous.
Streak and color both white, and hence color
is essential. Often transparent. Soluble; taste, purely
saline. In specific gravity and lustre it is a good example
of a mineral in which an acidic element predominates.
Specimen 11.
3. Limonite.—Hydrous sesquioxide of iron: oxygen,
25; iron, 60; water, 15; = 100. Usually amorphous;
occurring in stalactitic and botryoidal forms, having a
fibrous structure; and also concretionary, massive, and
earthy (yellow ochre). Hardness, 5-5.5. Sp. gr., 3.6-4.
Lustre, vitreous or silky, inclining to metallic, and sometimes
dull. Color, various shades of black, brown, and
yellow. Streak, ochre-yellow; hence color partly non-essential.
Specimen 12.
4. Hematite.—Sesquioxide of iron: oxygen, 30;
iron, 70; = 100. Hexagonal system, in distinct crystals,
but usually lamellar, granular, or compact,—columnar,
botryoidal, and stalactitic forms being common. Hardness,
5.5-6.5; good crystals are harder than steel. Sp.
gr., 4.5-5.3. Lustre, metallic, sometimes dull. Color,
iron-black, but red when earthy or pulverized (red
ochre). Streak, red, and color, therefore, mainly non-essential;
.pn +1 // 046.png
sometimes attracted by the magnet. Specimen
13.
Hematite has the same composition as limonite,
minus the water; and by comparing the hardness and
specific gravity of these two minerals we see that they
are a good illustration of the principle that hydrous
minerals are softer and lighter than anhydrous minerals
of analogous composition. Limonite and hematite are
two great natural coloring agents, and almost all yellow,
brown, and red colors in rocks and soils are due
to their presence.
5. Magnetite.—Protoxide and sesquioxide of iron:
oxygen, 27.6; iron, 72.4; = 100. Isometric system,
usually in octahedrons or dodecahedrons. Most abundant
variety is coarsely to finely granular, sometimes
dendritic. Hardness, 5.5-6.5, same as hematite. Sp.
gr., 4.9-5.2. Lustre, metallic. Color and streak, iron-black,
and hence color essential. Strongly magnetic;
some specimens have distinct polarity, and are called
loadstones. Specimen 14.
The three iron-oxides just described—limonite,
hematite, and magnetite—are all important ores of
iron, and form a well-marked natural series. Thus
limonite is never, hematite is usually, and magnetite is
always, crystalline. Again, limonite with 60 per cent.
of iron is never magnetic, hematite with 70 per cent.
is sometimes magnetic, while magnetite with 72.4 per
cent. is always magnetic. As the iron increases so
does the magnetism. We have here an excellent
illustration of the principle that the properties of the
elements can be traced in those minerals in which they
predominate. Iron is the only strongly magnetic
.pn +1 // 047.png
element: magnetite contains more iron than any other
mineral, and it is the only strongly magnetic mineral.
These three iron-ores are easily distinguished from
each other by the color of their powders or streak,—limonite
yellow, hematite red, and magnetite black,—and
from all other common minerals by their high
specific gravity.
6. Quartz.—Oxide of silicon or silica: oxygen,
53.33; silicon, 46.67; = 100. Hexagonal system. The
most common form is a hexagonal prism terminated
by a hexagonal pyramid. Also coarsely and finely
granular to perfectly compact, like flint; the compact
or cryptocrystalline varieties often assuming botryoidal,
stalactitic, and concretionary forms. It has no cleavage,
but usually breaks with an irregular, conchoidal
fracture like glass. Hardness, 7, being No. 7 of the
scale; scratches glass easily. Sp. gr., 2.5-2.8. Lustre,
vitreous. Pure quartz is colorless or white, but by
admixture of impurities it may be of almost any color.
Streak always white or light colored. Quartz is usually,
as in specimen 15, transparent and glassy, but may be
translucent or opaque. It is almost absolutely infusible
and insoluble.
The varieties of quartz are very numerous, but they
may be arranged in two great groups:—
1. Phenocrystalline or vitreous varieties, including
rock-crystal, amethyst, rose quartz, yellow quartz, smoky
quartz, milky quartz, ferruginous quartz, etc.
2. Cryptocrystalline or compact varieties, including
chalcedony, carnelian, agate, onyx, jasper, flint, chert,
etc. Only three varieties, however, are of any great
geological importance; these are: common glassy
quartz (spec. 15), flint (spec. 16), and chert.
.pn +1 // 048.png
Quartz is one of the most important constituents
of the earth’s crust, and it is also the hardest and
most durable of all common minerals. We have
already observed (p. 12) that it is entirely unaltered
by exposure to the weather; i.e., it cannot be decomposed;
and, being very hard, the same mechanical
wear which, assisted by more or less chemical decomposition,
reduces softer minerals to an impalpable
powder or clay, must leave the quartz chiefly in the
form of sand and gravel. This agrees with our observation
that sand (spec. 30), especially, is usually merely
pulverized quartz.
Opal is a mineral closely allied to quartz, and may
be mentioned in this connection. It is of similar composition,
but contains from 5 to 20 per cent. of
water, and is decidedly softer and lighter. Hardness,
5.5-6.5; sp. gr., 1.9-2.3.
7. Gypsum.—Hydrous sulphate of calcium: sulphur
trioxide (SO₃), 46.5; lime (CaO), 32.6; water (H₂O),
20.9; = 100. Monoclinic system. Often in distinct
rhombic crystals; also foliated, fibrous, and finely granular.
Hardness, 1.5-2; the hardest varieties being
No. 2 of the scale of hardness. Sp. gr., 2.3. Lustre,
pearly, vitreous, or dull. Color and streak usually white
or gray. The principal varieties of gypsum are (a) selenite,
which includes all distinctly crystallized or transparent
gypsum; (b) fibrous gypsum or satin-spar;
(c) alabaster, fine-grained, light-colored, and translucent.
Gypsum is easily distinguished from all common
minerals resembling it by its softness and the
fact that it is not affected by acids. Specimen 17.
8. Calcite.—Carbonate of calcium: carbon dioxide
.pn +1 // 049.png
(CO₂), 44; lime (CaO), 56; = 100. Hexagonal system,
usually in rhombohedrons, scalenohedrons, or hexagonal
prisms. Cleavage rhombohedral and highly perfect
(specimen 18). Also fibrous and compact to coarsely
granular, in stalactitic, concretionary, and other forms.
Hardness, 2.5-3.5, usually 3 (see scale of hardness).
Sp. gr., 2.5-2.75. Lustre, vitreous. Color and streak
usually white. Transparent crystallized calcite is
known as Iceland-spar, and is remarkable for its strong
double refraction. When finely fibrous it makes a
satin-spar similar to gypsum. Geologically speaking,
calcite is a mineral of the first importance, being the
sole essential constituent of all limestones. It is
readily distinguished from allied species by its perfect
rhombohedral cleavage; by its softness, being easily
scratched with a knife; and above all by its lively effervescence
with acids, for it is the only common mineral
effervescing freely with cold dilute acid. To apply this
test it is only necessary to touch the specimen with a
drop of dilute chlorohydric acid. The effervescence,
of course, is due to the escape of the carbon dioxide
in a gaseous form. Specimen 18.
9. Dolomite.—Carbonate of calcium and magnesium:
carbonate of calcium (CaCO₃), 54.35; carbonate
of magnesium (MgCO₃), 45.65; = 100. Hexagonal
system, being nearly isomorphous with calcite. Rhombohedral
cleavage perfect. Hardness, 3.5-4; sp. gr.,
2.8-2.9, being harder and heavier than calcite. Lustre,
color, and streak same as for calcite, from which it
is most easily distinguished by its non-effervescence or
only feeble effervescence with cold dilute acid, though
effervescing freely with strong or hot acid. Spec. 19.
.pn +1 // 050.png
10. Siderite.—Carbonate of iron: carbon dioxide
(CO₂), 37.9; protoxide of iron (FeO), 62.1; = 100.
Crystallization and cleavage essentially the same as for
calcite and dolomite. Hardness, 3.5-4.5, and sp. gr.,
3.7-3.9. Lustre, vitreous. Color, white, gray, and
brown. Streak, white. With acid, siderite behaves like
dolomite. It is distinguished from both calcite and
dolomite by its high specific gravity, which is easily
explained by the fact that it is largely composed of the
heavy element, iron.
With one exception, the fifteen minerals which we
have yet to study belong to the class of silicates, which
includes more than one-fourth of the known species of
minerals, and, omitting quartz and calcite, all of the
really important rock-constituents. The silicate minerals
may be very conveniently divided into two great
groups, the basic and acidic. This is not a sharp
division; on the contrary, there is a perfectly gradual
passage from one group to the other; and yet this is,
for geological purposes at least, a very natural classification.
The dividing line falls in the neighborhood of
60 per cent. of silica; i.e., all species containing this
proportion of silica or less are classed as basic, since
in them the basic elements predominate; while those
containing more than 60 per cent. of silica are classed
as acidic, because their characteristics are determined
chiefly by the acid element or silica. The principal
bases occurring in the silicates, named in the order of
their relative importance, are aluminum, magnesium,
calcium, iron, sodium, and potassium; and of these,
magnesium, calcium, iron, and usually sodium, are
especially characteristic of basic species.
.pn +1 // 051.png
Iron is the heaviest base; but all the bases, except
sodium and potassium, are heavier than the acid—silica;
consequently basic minerals must be, as a rule,
heavier than acidic minerals. And since basic minerals
contain more iron than acidic, they must be darker
colored. In general, we say, dark, heavy silicates are
basic, and vice versa. All this is of especial importance
because in the rocks nature keeps these two classes
separate in a great degree.
11. Amphibole.—Silicate of aluminum, magnesium,
calcium, iron, and sodium. The bases occur in very
various proportions, forming many varieties; but the
only variety of especial geological interest is hornblende,
the average percentage composition of which
is as follows: silica (SiO₂), 50; alumina (Al₂O₃), 10;
magnesia (MgO), 18; lime (CaO), 12; iron oxide
(FeO and Fe₂O₃), 8; and soda (Na₂O), 2; = 100.
Monoclinic system: usually in rhombic or six-sided
prisms which may be short and thick, but are more
often acicular or bladed. Hardness, 5-6; sp. gr.,
2.9-3.4. Lustre, vitreous; color, black and greenish
black; and streak similar to color, but much paler.
Compare with quartz, and observe the strong contrast
in color possible with minerals having the same lustre.
Specimen 20.
12. Pyroxene.—Like amphibole, this species embraces
many varieties, and these exhibit a wide range
in composition; but of these augite alone is an important
rock-constituent. Hence in lithology we practically
substitute for amphibole and pyroxene, hornblende,
and augite respectively.
Augite is very similar in composition to hornblende,
.pn +1 // 052.png
but contains usually more lime and less alumina and
alkali. Physically, too, these minerals are almost
identical, crystallizing in the same system and in very
similar forms, and agreeing in hardness, color, lustre,
and streak. Augite is heavier than hornblende, sp. gr.,
3.2-3.5. A certain prismatic angle, which in augite
is 87°5´, is 124°30´ in hornblende. Slender, bladed
crystals are more common with hornblende than augite.
When examined in thin sections with the polarizer,
augite does not afford the phenomenon of dichroism,
which is strongly marked in hornblende. However, as
these minerals commonly occur in the rocks, in small
and imperfect crystals, these distinctions can only be
observed in thin sections under the microscope; so
that, as regards the naked eye, they are practically
indistinguishable.
It might appear at first that the distinction of minerals
so nearly identical is not an important matter; but
nature has decreed otherwise. Augite and hornblende
are typical examples of basic minerals; but augite is,
both in its composition and associations, the more
basic of the two. In proof of this we need only to
know that it very rarely occurs in the same rock with
quartz, while hornblende is found very commonly in
that association. Quartz in a rock means an excess of
acid or silica, and almost necessarily implies the absence
of highly basic minerals. In other words, hornblende
is often, and augite very rarely, found in connection with
acidic minerals; and it is this difference of association
chiefly that makes their distinction essential to the
proper recognition of rocks; while at the same time
it affords an easy, though of course not absolutely certain,
.pn +1 // 053.png
means of determining whether the black constituent
of any particular rock is hornblende or augite.
Mica Family.—Mica is not the name of a single
mineral, but of a whole family of minerals, including
some half-dozen species. Only two, however,—muscovite
and biotite,—are sufficiently abundant to engage
our attention. These are complex, basic silicates of
aluminum, magnesium, iron, potassium, and sodium.
The crystallization of biotite is hexagonal, and of muscovite
monoclinic; but both occur commonly in flat
six-sided forms. Undoubtedly the most important and
striking characteristic of the whole mica family is the
remarkably perfect cleavage parallel with the basal
planes of the crystals, and the wonderful thinness, and
above all the elasticity, of the cleavage lamellæ. The
cleavage contrasts the micas with all other common
minerals, and makes their certain identification one of
the easiest things in lithology. The micas are soft
minerals, the hardness ranging from 2 to 3, and being
usually easily scratched with the nail. Sp. gr. varies
from 2.7-3.1. Lustre, pearly; and streak, white or
uncolored.
The distinguishing features of muscovite and biotite
are as follows:—
13. Muscovite.—Contains 47 per cent. of silica, 3
per cent. of sesquioxide of iron, and 10 per cent. of
alkalies, chiefly potash; and the characteristic colors
are white, gray, and, more rarely, brown and yellow.
Non-dichroic. Usually found in association with acidic
minerals. The mica used in the arts is muscovite.
Specimen 21.
14. Biotite.—Contains only 36 per cent. of silica,
.pn +1 // 054.png
20 per cent. of oxide of iron, and 17 per cent. of magnesia;
colors, deep black to green. Strongly dichroic.
Commonly occurs with other basic minerals. Compare
color with per cent. of iron.
These differences are tabulated below:—
.if h
.ta ll w=30%
Muscovite =|Biotite =
\ \ Acidic mica.|\ \ Basic mica.
\ \ Non-ferruginous mica.|\ \ Ferruginous mica.
\ \ Potash mica.|\ \ Magnesian mica.
\ \ White mica.|\ \ Black mica.
\ \ Non-dichroic mica.|\ \ Dichroic mica.
.ta-
.if-
.if t
.nf b
Muscovite = Biotite =
Acidic mica. Basic mica.
Non-ferruginous mica. Ferruginous mica.
Potash mica. Magnesian mica.
White mica. Black mica.
Non-dichroic mica. Dichroic mica.
.nf-
.if-
Feldspar Family.—Like mica, feldspar is the name
of a family of minerals; and these are, geologically, the
most important of all minerals. They are, above all
others, the minerals of which rocks are made, and their
abundance is well expressed in the name,—feldspar
being simply the German for field-spar, implying that
it is the common spar or mineral of the fields.
Chemically, the feldspars are silicates of aluminum
and potassium, sodium or calcium. They crystallize
in the monoclinic and triclinic systems; and all possess
easy cleavage in two directions at right angles to
each other, or nearly so. The general physical characters,
including the cleavage, are well exhibited in the
common species, orthoclase (specimen 22).
In hardness the feldspars range from 5 to 7, being
usually near 6, and almost always distinctly softer than
quartz. Sp. gr. varies from 2.5-2.75; lustre, from
vitreous to pearly; color, from white and gray to red,
brown, green, etc., but usually light. Streak, always
white; rarely transparent. By exposure to the weather,
feldspars gradually lose their alkalies and lime, become
.pn +1 // 055.png
hydrated, and are changed to kaolin or common clay.
A similar change takes place with the micas, augite,
and hornblende; but these species, being usually rich in
iron, make clays which are much darker colored than
those derived from feldspars. The fact that the feldspars
contain little or no iron undoubtedly explains
their low specific gravity and light colors, as compared
with the other minerals just named. The only common
minerals for which the feldspars are liable to be
mistaken are quartz and the carbonates. From the
latter they are easily distinguished by their superior
hardness and non-effervescence with acids; and from
the former, by possessing distinct cleavage, by being
rarely transparent, by being somewhat softer, and by
changing to clay on exposure to the weather.
The feldspars of greatest geological interest are five
in number, and may be classified chemically as follows:—
.if t
.nf b
Orthoclase,—silicate of aluminum and potassium, or
potash feldspar.
Albite,—silicate of aluminum and sodium, or
soda feldspar.
Anorthite,—silicate of aluminum and calcium, or
lime feldspar.
Oligoclase,—silicate of aluminum and sodium, and calcium, or
soda-lime feldspar.
Labradorite,—silicate of aluminum and calcium, and sodium, or
lime-soda feldspar.
.nf-
.if-
.if h
.li
Orthoclase,—silicate of aluminum and potassium, or |
| potash feldspar. |
Albite,—silicate of aluminum and sodium, or |
| soda feldspar. |
Anorthite,—silicate of aluminum and calcium, or |
| lime feldspar. |
Oligoclase,—silicate of aluminum and sodium, and calcium, or |
| soda-lime feldspar. |
Labradorite,—silicate of aluminum and calcium, and sodium, or |
| lime-soda feldspar. |
.li-
.if-
This appears like a complex arrangement, but it can
be simplified. Orthoclase crystallizes in the monoclinic
system, and all the other feldspars in the triclinic
system. With the exception of albite, which is a comparatively
.pn +1 // 056.png
rare species, the triclinic feldspars all contain
less silica than orthoclase; i.e., are more basic. This is
shown by the subjoined table giving the average composition
of each of the feldspars:—
.if t
.nf b
SiO₂ Al₂O₃ K₂O Na₂O CaO Total.
Orthoclase, 65 18 17 -- -- = 100
Albite, 68 20 -- 12 -- = 100
Oligoclase, 62 24 -- 9 5 = 100
Labradorite, 53 30 -- 4 13 = 100
Anorthite, 43 37 -- -- 20 = 100
.nf-
.if-
.if h
.ta lccccccc w=40%
|SiO₂|Al₂O₃|K₂O|Na₂O|CaO||Total.
Orthoclase, |65|18|17|--|--|=|100
Albite, |68|20|--|12|--|=|100
Oligoclase, |62|24|--|\^\^9|\^\^5|=|100
Labradorite,|53|30|--|\^\^4|13|=|100
Anorthite, |43|37|--|--|20|=|100
.ta-
.if-
As we should naturally expect, the triclinic feldspars
occur usually with other basic minerals, while the monoclinic
species, orthoclase, is acidic in its associations;
furthermore, the triclinic feldspars are often intimately
associated with each other, but are rarely important
constituents of rocks containing much orthoclase. In
other words, the distinction of orthoclase from the basic
or triclinic feldspars is important and comparatively
easy, while the distinction of the different basic feldspars
from each other is both unimportant and difficult.
Hence, in lithology, we find it best to put all these
basic feldspars together, as if they were one species,
under the name plagioclase, which refers to the oblique
cleavage of all these feldspars, and contrasts with
orthoclase, which refers to the right-angled cleavage of
that species.
This statement of the relations of the feldspars is, of
course, beyond the comprehension of many children,
and yet it should be understood by the teacher who
would lead the children to any but the most superficial
views.
15. Orthoclase.—This is the common feldspar, and
.pn +1 // 057.png
the most abundant of all minerals, being the principal
constituent of granite, gneiss, and many other important
rocks. The most characteristic colors are white,
gray, pinkish, and flesh-red. Specimen 22.
16. Plagioclase.—Like orthoclase, these species
may be of almost any color; yet these two great divisions
of the feldspars are usually contrasted in this
respect. Thus, bluish and grayish colors are most
common with plagioclase, and white or reddish colors
with orthoclase. Specimen 23 is labradorite, and, in
every respect, a typical example of plagioclase. On
certain faces and cleavage-surfaces of the plagioclase
crystals we may often observe a series of straight parallel
lines or bands which are often very fine,—fifty to a
hundred in a single crystal. These striæ are due to
the mode of twinning, and are of especial importance,
since, while they are very characteristic of plagioclase,
they never occur in orthoclase. As stated, these
twinning striæ in plagioclase are often visible to the
naked eye; and when they are not, they may usually
be revealed by examining a thin section under the
microscope with polarized light. Plagioclase decays
much more rapidly when exposed to the weather than
orthoclase. This point becomes perfectly clear when
we compare weathered ledges of diabase (or any trap-rock,
see specimen 2) and granite; for plagioclase
is the principal constituent of the former rock, and
orthoclase of the latter.
Hydrous Silicates.—Many silicates contain water,
and some of these are of great geological importance.
What has been stated on a preceding page concerning
the softness and lightness of hydrated minerals is especially
.pn +1 // 058.png
applicable here; for all the geologically important
hydrous silicates are distinctly softer and lighter than
anhydrous minerals of otherwise similar composition.
Furthermore, they usually have an unctuous or slippery
feel; and, with one exception (kaolin), are of a green
or greenish color.
17. Kaolinite (Kaolin).—Hydrous silicate of aluminum:
silica (SiO₂), 46; alumina (Al₂O₃), 40; and
water (H₂O), 14; = 100. Orthorhombic system, in
rhombic or hexagonal scales or plates, but usually earthy
or clay-like. Hardness, 1-2.5; sp. gr., 2.4-2.65.
The pure mineral is white; but it is usually colored
by impurities, the principal of which are iron oxides
and carbonaceous matter. Kaolin is the most abundant
of all the hydrous silicates, and it is the basis and
often the sole constituent of common clay,—a very
common mineral, but rarely pure. We have already
(p. 11) noticed the mode of origin of kaolin or clay.
It results from the decomposition of various aluminous
silicate minerals, especially the feldspars. Under the
combined influence of carbon dioxide and moisture,
feldspars give up their potassium, sodium, and calcium,
and take on water, and the result is kaolin. This mineral
is believed to be always a decomposition product.
Perhaps the best, or at least the most convenient, test
for kaolin is the argillaceous odor, the odor of moistened
clay. Specimen 24.
18. Talc.—Hydrous silicate of magnesium: silica
(SiO₂), 63 (acidic); magnesia (MgO), 32; water
(H₂O), 5; = 100. Orthorhombic system, but rarely in
distinct crystals. Cleavage in one direction very perfect;
the cleavage lamellæ are flexible, but not elastic,
.pn +1 // 059.png
as in mica. Hardness, 1; see scale. Sp. gr., 2.55-2.8.
Lustre, pearly. Color, apple-green to white; and streak,
white. The feel is very smooth and greasy; and, in
connection with the color and foliation, affords the best
means of distinguishing talc from allied minerals. Talc
sometimes results from the alteration of augite, hornblende,
and other minerals, but it is not always nor
usually an alteration product.
19. Serpentine.—Hydrous silicate of magnesium:
silica (SiO₂), 44 (basic); magnesia (MgO), 44; water
(H₂O), 12; = 100. Essentially amorphous. Hardness,
2.5-4; sp. gr., 2.5-2.65. Lustre, greasy, waxy, or
earthy. Color, various shades of green and usually
darker than talc, but streak always white. Feel,
smooth, sometimes greasy. Distinguished from talc
by its hardness, compactness, and darker green.
Sometimes results from the alteration of olivine and
other magnesian minerals, but usually we are to regard
it as an original mineral. Specimen 25.
20. Chlorite.—This is, properly, the name of a
group of highly basic minerals of very variable composition,
but they are all essentially hydrous silicates of
aluminum, magnesium, and iron; and the average
composition of the most abundant species, prochlorite,
is as follows: silica (SiO₂), 30; alumina (Al₂O₃), 18;
magnesia (MgO), 15; protoxide of iron (FeO), 26;
and water (H₂O), 11; = 100. The chlorites crystallize
in several different systems, but in all there is a highly
perfect cleavage in one direction, giving, as in talc, a
foliated structure with flexible but inelastic laminæ.
The cleavage scales, however, are sometimes minute,
and the structure massive or granular. Hardness of
.pn +1 // 060.png
prochlorite, 1-2; between talc and serpentine. Sp. gr.,
2.78-2.96. All the chlorites have a pearly to vitreous
lustre. Color usually some shade of green; in prochlorite
a dark or blackish green, darker than serpentine,
as that is darker than talc. Streak, a lighter, whitish
green. Less unctuous than talc, but more so than serpentine.
The chlorites are produced very commonly,
but not generally, by the alteration of basic anhydrous
silicates, like augite and hornblende. Specimen 26.
21. Hydro-mica.—This, too, is properly the name
of a group of minerals; but for geological purposes
they may be regarded as one species. Taking a general
view of the composition, these are simply the anhydrous
or ordinary micas, which we have already
studied, with from 5 to 10 per cent. of water added.
In crystallization and structure they are essentially
mica-like. Although not distinctly softer than the
common micas, they are lighter, always more unctuous
and slippery, and usually of a greenish color. The
micaceous structure with elastic laminæ serves to distinguish
the hydro-micas from other hydrous silicates.
22. Glauconite.—Hydrous silicate of aluminum,
iron, and potassium: silica (SiO₂), 50; alumina (Al₂O₃),
protoxide of iron (FeO), and potash (K₂O), together,
41; and water (H₂O), 9; = 100. Amorphous, forming
rounded and generally loose grains, which often have
a microscopic organic nucleus. It is dull and earthy,
like chalk, and always soft, green, and light, but not
particularly unctuous. Glauconite is the principal,
often the sole, constituent of the rock greensand, which
occurs abundantly in the newer geological formations,
and is now forming in the deep water of the Gulf of
.pn +1 // 061.png
Mexico and along our Atlantic sea-board. Specimen
27.
This completes our list of minerals occurring chiefly
as essential constituents of rocks; and following are
three of the more common and important minerals
occurring chiefly as accessory, rarely as essential, rock-constituents.
23. Chrysolite (Olivine).—Silicate of magnesium
and iron: silica (SiO₂), 41; magnesia (MgO), 51;
protoxide of iron (Fe₂O₃), 8; = 100. Orthorhombic
system; but usually in irregular glassy grains. Hardness,
6-7. Sp. gr., 3.3-3.5. Lustre, vitreous; color,
usually some shade of green; and streak, white.
Chrysolite sometimes closely resembles quartz, but its
green color usually suffices to distinguish it. It is a
common constituent of basalt and allied rocks. By
absorption of water it is changed into serpentine and
talc. See examples in specimen.
24. Garnet.—The composition of this mineral is
extremely variable; but the most important variety is a
basic silicate of aluminum and iron: silica (SiO₂), 37;
alumina (Al₂O₃), 20; and protoxide of iron (FeO), 43;
= 100. Isometric system, usually in distinct crystals,
twelve-sided (dodecahedrons) and twenty-four-sided
(trapezohedrons) forms being most common. Hardness,
6.5-7.5; average as hard as quartz. Sp. gr.,
3.15-4.3; compare with the high percentage of iron.
Lustre, vitreous; colors, various, usually some shade of
red or brown; and streak, white. Some varieties contain
iron enough to make them magnetic. Garnet is
easily distinguished by its form, color, and hardness
from all other minerals. It is a common but not an
.pn +1 // 062.png
abundant mineral, occurring most frequently in gneiss,
mica schist, and other stratified crystalline rocks. See
examples in specimen.
25. Pyrite.—Sulphide of iron: sulphur, 53.3; iron,
46.7; = 100. Isometric system, occurring usually in
distinct crystals, the cube and the twelve-sided form
known as the pyritohedron being the most common.
Hardness, 6-6.5, striking fire with steel. Sp. gr., 4.8-5.2;
heavy because rich in iron. Lustre, metallic and
splendent. Color, pale, brass-yellow, and streak,
greenish or brownish. Pyrite is sometimes mistaken
for gold, but it is not malleable; while its color, hardness,
and specific gravity, combined, easily distinguish
it from all common minerals. As an accessory rock-constituent,
pyrite occurs usually in isolated cubes or
pyritohedrons. Specimen 10.
.sp 2
.h4
Textures of Rocks.
Texture is a general name for those smaller structural
features of rocks which can be studied in hand
specimens, and which depend upon the forms and sizes
of the constituent particles of the rocks, and the ways
in which these are united.
By “constituent particles” we mean, not the atoms
or molecules of matter composing the rocks, but the
pebbles in conglomerate, grains of sand in sandstone,
crystals of quartz, feldspar, and mica in granite, etc.
The four most important textures are:—
(1) Fragmental texture.—The rock is composed of
mere irregular, angular, or rounded, but visible, fragments.
Examples: sand, sandstone, gravel, conglomerate,
etc. Specimens 30, 31, 28, 29.
.pn +1 // 063.png
(2) Crystalline texture.—The constituent particles
are chiefly, at least, distinctly crystalline, as shown
either by external form, or cleavage, or both. Examples:
granite, diabase, gneiss, etc. Specimens 45, 1,
41.
(3) Compact texture.—The constituent particles
are indistinguishable by the naked eye, but become visible
under the microscope, appearing as separate crystalline
grains or as irregular fragments. In other words, if,
in the case of either the granular or crystalline textures,
we conceive the particles to become microscopically
small, then we have the compact texture. Examples:
clay, slate, many limestones, basalt, etc. Specimens
34, 35, 39.
(4) Vitreous texture.—The texture of glass, in which
the constituent particles are absolutely invisible even
with the highest powers of the microscope, and may
be nothing more than the molecules of the substance,
which thus, so far as our powers of observation are
concerned, presents a perfectly continuous surface.
Examples: obsidian, glassy quartz, and some kinds of
coal. Specimens 47, 15.
These four textures, which, it will be observed, are
determined by the forms and sizes of the constituent
particles, may be called the primary textures, because
every rock must possess one of them. We cannot conceive
of a rock which is neither fragmental, crystalline,
compact, nor vitreous. But in addition to one of the
primary textures, a rock may or may not have one or
more of what may be called secondary textures. These
are determined by the way in which the particles are
united, the mode or pattern of the arrangement, etc.
.pn +1 // 064.png
Following are definitions of the principal secondary
textures:—
(1) Laminated texture.—This exists where the particles
are arranged in thin, parallel layers, which may
be marked simply by planes of division, or the alternate
layers may be composed of particles differing in
composition, form, size, or color, etc. Among the
laminated textures we thus distinguish: (a) the banded
texture, where the layers are contrasted in color, texture,
or composition, but cohere, so that there is no
cleavage or easy splitting parallel with the stratification;
and (b) the schistose or shaly texture, where such fissility
or stratification-cleavage exists. If a fragmental, compact,
or vitreous rock is fissile, we use the term shaly;
but a fissile, crystalline rock is described as schistose.
The banded texture may occur with the fragmental,—banded
sandstones, etc.; with the crystalline,—many
gneisses, etc. (specimen 41); with the compact,—many
slates, limestones, felsites, etc. (specimens 34,
42); with the vitreous,—banded obsidian, furnace
slags, and some coal. The schistose texture may occur
with the crystalline,—mica schist, etc. (specimen 43);
and the shaly texture with the compact and fragmental,
but rarely with the vitreous.
(2) Porphyritic texture.—We have this texture
when separate and distinct crystals of any mineral, but
most commonly of feldspar, are enclosed in a relatively
fine-grained base or matrix, which may be either crystalline,
compact, or vitreous, but rarely fragmental. Specimens
5, 6, 7 are examples of the porphyritic compact
texture.
.pn +1 // 065.png
(3) Concretionary texture.—When one or more
constituents of a rock have the form, in whole or in part,
not of distinct angular crystals, but of rounded concretions,
the texture is described as concretionary, the
concretions taking the place in this texture of the isolated
crystals in the porphyritic texture. This texture
occurs in connection with all the primary textures, but
the most familiar example is oölitic limestone.
(4) Vesicular texture.—A rock has this texture
when it contains numerous small cavities or vesicles.
These are most commonly produced by the expansion
of steam and other vapors when the rock is in a plastic
state; and hence the vesicular texture is found chiefly
in volcanic rocks. Except rarely, it is associated only
with the compact texture,—ordinary stony lavas (specimen
49); and with the vitreous texture,—pumice
(specimen 48).
(5) Amygdaloidal texture.—In the course of time
the vesicles of common lava are often filled with various
minerals deposited by infiltrating waters, giving rise to
the amygdaloidal texture, from the Latin amygdalum, an
almond, in allusion to a common form of the vesicles, or
amygdules, as they are called, after being filled. The
amygdaloidal texture is thus necessarily preceded by the
vesicular, and is limited to the same classes of rocks.
Specimen 50.
Besides the foregoing, there are many minor secondary
textures. The rocks known as tufas have what
may be called the tufaceous texture. Then we have
kinds of texture depending on the strength of the union
of the particles, as strong, weak, friable, earthy, etc.
.pn +1 // 066.png
.sp 2
.h4
Classification of Rocks.
Having finished our preliminary observations on the
characteristics of rocks, we are now about ready to
begin a systematic study of the rocks themselves; but
it is needful first to say a few words about the classification
of rocks, since upon this depends not only the
order in which we shall take the rocks up, but also the
ideas that will be imparted concerning their relations
and affinities. The classifications which have been
proposed at different times are almost as numerous as
the rocks themselves. Some of these are confessedly,
and even designedly, artificial, as when we classify
stones according to their uses in the arts, etc. But we
want something more scientific, a natural classification;
that is, one based upon the natural and permanent
characteristics of rocks. Rocks have been classified
according to chemical composition, mineralogical composition,
texture, color, density, hardness, etc.; but
these arrangements, taken singly or all combined, are
inadequate.
A natural classification may be defined as a concise
and systematic statement of the natural relations existing
among the objects classified. Now the most important
relations existing among rocks are those due
to their different origins. We must not forget that
lithology is a branch of geology, and that geology is
first of all a dynamical science. The most important
question that can be asked about any rock is, not What
is it made of? but How was it made? What were the
general forces or agencies concerned in its formation?
Rocks are the material in which the earth’s history is
written, and what we want to know first concerning any
rock is what it can tell us of the condition of that part
of the earth at the time it was made and subsequently.
.pn +1 // 067.png
.sp 2
.h4
Classification of Rocks.
.if h
.il fn=classification.png w=600px
.if-
.if t
.ll 77
.in 1
.nf b
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Sedimentary or Stratified Rocks. |
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| MECHANICALLY FORMED. |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| | _Unconsolidated._ | _Consolidated._ |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| _Conglomerate | Gravel. | Conglomerate. |
| group._ | | |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| _Arenaceous | Sand. | Sandstone. |
| group._ | | |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| _Argillaceous | Clay. | Slate. |
| group._ | | |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| CHEMICALLY AND ORGANICALLY FORMED. |
+-----------------------+-------------------------+------------------------+
| _Coal | _Iron-ore |_Calcareous | _Metamorphic group (Silicates)._ |
| group._ | group._ | group._ | Acidic. Basic. |
| | | |/----/\\----\\ /-------/\\-------\\ |
| | | |85 80 70 60 50 40 30|
+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------+
| Feldspathic. |
+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------+
| Peat. | Limonite. | Limestone. | Gneiss. Diorite. : |
| Lignite. | Hematite. | Dolomite. |........................... : |
|Bit. Coal. |Magnetite. | Gypsum. | : : : : : |
|Anthracite.| Siderite. | Rock-salt. | : :Syenite. Norite. : |
| Graphite. | | Phosphate | : : .............. : |
|Asphaltum. | | Rock. | : : : : : |
+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------+
| Non-Feldspathic. |
+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------+
| |_Siliceous | | : Mica Schist. : : |
| | group._ | |........................... : |
| +-----------+ | : : : : : |
| |Tripolite. | | :Hornbl. Schist. Amphibolite. |
| | Flint. | | :.............. ........: |
| | Siliceous | | : : : : : |
| | Tufa. | | : Talc Schist. :Chl. Schist. |
| |Novaculite.| | : :........ : ..........|
| | | | : : : : : |
| | | | : : Greensand. Serpentine. |
| | | | : : ........... ........ |
| | | | : : : : : |
+-----------+-----------+------------+-------------------------------------+
| Eruptive or Unstratified Rocks. |
+------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
| | PLUTONIC. |
| | Feldspathic. |
| +-------------------------------------+
| | : Granite. : Diorite. : |
| |.................. ........ : |
| | : : : : : |
| | : : Syenite. Diabase. |
| | : : ....... .......: |
| | : : : : : |
| +-------------------------------------+
| | VOLCANIC. |
|This part of the classification | Feldspathic. |
|is a blank, for the reason that +-------------------------------------+
|no eruptive rocks are known | :Rhyolite. : Andesite. : |
|which are chiefly composed of |........................... : |
|minerals belonging to the classes | : : : : : |
|of Native Elements, Chlorides, | : : Trachyte. Basalt. |
|Oxides, Sulphates, or Carbonates; | ...............: |
|_i.e._, all eruptive rocks, so | : : : : : |
|far as known, are principally | :Obsidian. : Tachylite.: |
|composed of minerals belonging |............................ : |
|to the class of Silicates. | : : : : : |
| | Petrosilex. :Porphyrite.: |
| |............................ : |
| | : : : : : |
| | : : Felsite. Melaphyr. |
| | : : ....... .......: |
| | : : : : : |
+------------------------------------+-------------------------------------+
.nf-
.in
.ll
.if-
// 068.png
.pn +2 // 069.png
The geological agencies, as we have already learned,
may be arranged in two great classes: first, the aqueous
or superficial agencies originating in the solar heat, and
producing the sedimentary or stratified rocks; and,
second, the igneous or subterranean agencies originating
in the central or interior heat, and producing the
eruptive or unstratified rocks. Hence, we want to
know first of any rock whether it is of aqueous or
igneous origin. Then, if it is a sedimentary rock,
whether it has been formed by the action chiefly of
mechanical forces, or of chemical and organic forces.
And, if it is an eruptive rock, whether it has cooled and
solidified below the earth’s surface in a fissure, and is a
dike or trappean rock, or has flowed out on the surface
and cooled in contact with the air, and thus become
an ordinary lava or volcanic rock.
Here we have the outlines of our classification, and
it will be observed that we have simply reached the
conclusion, in a somewhat roundabout manner, that
there should always be a general correspondence between
the classification of rocks and the classification
of the forces that produce them. The general plan
of the preceding scheme of the classification must
now be clear, and the details will be explained as we
go along.
.pn +1 // 070.png
.sp 2
.h4
Descriptions of Rocks.
.sp 2
.h5
1.—Sedimentary or Stratified Rocks.
1. Mechanically formed or Fragmental Rocks.—These
consist of materials deposited from suspension
in water, and the process of their formation is throughout
chiefly mechanical. The materials deposited are
mere fragments of older rocks; and, if the fragments
are large, we call the newly deposited sediment gravel;
if finer, sand; and, if impalpably fine, clay. These
fragmental rocks cannot be classified chemically, since
the same handful of gravel, for instance, may contain
pebbles of many different kinds of rocks, and thus be
of almost any and very variable composition. Such
chemical distinctions as can be established are only
partial, and the classification, like the origin, must be
mechanical. Accordingly, as just shown, we recognize
three principal groups based upon the size of the fragments;
viz.:—
.nf b
(1) Conglomerate group.
(2) Arenaceous group.
(3) Argillaceous group.
.nf-
This mode of division is possible and natural, simply
because, as we observed in an early experiment, materials
arranged by the mechanical action of water are
always assorted according to size. When first deposited,
the gravel, sand, and clay are, of course, perfectly
loose and unconsolidated; but in the course of time
they may, under the influence of pressure, heat, and
chemical action, attain almost any degree of consolidation,
becoming conglomerate, sandstone, and slate,
.pn +1 // 071.png
respectively. The pressure may be vertical where it is
due to the weight of newer deposits, or horizontal
where it results from the cooling and shrinking of the
earth’s interior. The heat may result from mechanical
movements, or contact with eruptive rocks; or it may
be due simply to the burial of the sediments, which, it
will be seen, must virtually bring them nearer the great
source of heat in the earth’s interior, on the same
principle that the temperature of a man’s coat, on a
cold day, is raised by putting on an overcoat. The
effect of the heat, ordinarily, is simply drying, coöperating
with the pressure to expel the water from the
sediments; but, if the temperature is high, it may bake
or vitrify them, just as in brick-making. Sediments
are consolidated by chemical action when mineral
substances, especially calcium carbonate, the iron
oxides, and silica are deposited between the particles
by infiltrating waters, cementing the particles together.
This principle is easily demonstrated experimentally
by taking some loose sand and wetting it repeatedly
with a saturated solution of some soluble mineral, like
salt or alum, allowing the water to evaporate each time
before making a fresh application. The interstices
between the grains are gradually filled up, and the
sand soon becomes a firm rock. But the student
should clearly understand that, in geology, gravel,
sand, and clay are just as truly rocks before their
consolidation as after. It is plain then that in each
of the principal groups of fragmental rocks we must
recognize an unconsolidated division and a consolidated
division.
(1) Conglomerate group.—The rocks belonging in
.pn +1 // 072.png
this group we know before consolidation as gravel,
and after consolidation as conglomerate.
Gravel.—The pebbles, as we have already seen, are
usually, though not always, well rounded or water-worn;
and they may be of any size from coarse grains
of sand to boulders. As a rule, however, the larger
pebbles, especially, are of approximately uniform size
in the same bed or layer of gravel, with, of course, sufficient
fine material to fill the interstices. Although the
same limited mass of gravel may show the widest possible
range in chemical and mineralogical composition,
yet hard rocks are evidently more likely than soft rocks
to form pebbles; and hence quartz and quartz-bearing
rocks usually predominate in gravels. Specimen 28.
Conglomerate.—Consolidated gravel. Children
should be led to an appreciation of this point by a
careful comparison of the forms of the pebbles in the
gravel and conglomerate. The conglomerate seems
to contain a larger proportion of fine material than ordinary
gravel. But this is because the gravel is usually,
as with our specimen, taken from the surface of the
beach, where, of course, the pebbles are clean and separate;
but if it had remained there to be covered by a
subsequently deposited layer, enough fine stuff would
have been sifted into the holes to fill them. And in
the finished gravel, just as in the conglomerate, the
pebbles are usually closely packed, with just sufficient
sand and clay, or paste, as the material in which the
pebbles are imbedded is called, to fill the interstices.
The paste is usually similar in composition to the pebbles,
with this difference: hard materials predominate
in the pebbles and soft in the paste.
.pn +1 // 073.png
Stratified rocks generally show the stratification in
parallel lines or bands differing in color, composition,
etc.; but nothing like this can be detected in our
specimens of conglomerate; and the question might
be asked, How do we know that this is a stratified
rock? In answer, it can be said that our hand-specimens
appear unstratified simply because the rock is so
coarse; but when we look at large masses, and especially
when we see it in place in the quarry, that
parallel arrangement of the material which we call stratification
is usually very evident; and we often see precisely
the same thing in gravel banks. It is, however,
wholly unnecessary that we should see the stratification
in order to know certainly that this is a stratified or
aqueous rock, because the forms of the pebbles show
very plainly that they have been fashioned and deposited
by moving water; and we have in the smallest
specimen proof positive that our conglomerate is a
consolidated sea-beach.
Conglomerate shows the same variations in composition
and texture as gravel; it may be composed of
almost any kind of material in pebbles of almost any
size. We recognize two principal varieties of conglomerate
based on the forms of the pebbles; if, as is
usual, these are well rounded and water-worn, the rock
is true pudding-stone (specimen 29); but, if they are
angular, or show but little wear, it is called breccia.
(2) Arenaceous Group.—The conglomerate group
passes insensibly into the arenaceous group; for, from
the coarsest gravel to the finest sand, the gradation is
unbroken, and every sandstone is merely a conglomerate
on a small scale.
.pn +1 // 074.png
Sand.—Like gravel, sand may be of almost any
composition, but as a rule it is quartzose; quartz, on
account of its hardness and the absence of cleavage,
being better adapted than any other common mineral
to form sand. Where the composition of a sand is not
specified, a quartzose sand is always understood. By
examining a typical sand with a lens, and noting the
glassy appearance of the grains, and then testing their
hardness on a piece of glass, which they will scratch as
easily as quartz, the pupil is readily convinced that
each grain is simply an angular fragment of quartz.
Specimen 30.
Sandstone.—Consolidated sand. In proving this,
children will notice first the granular or sandy appearance
of the sandstone; and then, with the lens, that the
grains in the sandstone have the same forms as the
sand-grains. The stratification cannot be seen very
distinctly in our hand-specimens, but in larger masses
it is usually very plain, as may be observed in the
blocks used for building, and still better in the quarries.
However, even if the stratification were not visible to
the eye, we could have no doubt that sandstone is a
mechanically formed stratified rock; because the form
of the grains, just as in the conglomerate, tells us that.
Many sandstones, too, contain the fossil remains of
plants and animals, and these are always regarded as
affording positive proof that the rocks containing them
belong to the aqueous or stratified series.
There are many varieties of sandstone depending
upon differences in composition, texture, etc., but we
have not space to notice them in detail. In sandstone,
just as in sand, quartz is the predominant constituent,
.pn +1 // 075.png
although we sometimes find varieties composed largely
or entirely of feldspar, mica, calcite, or other minerals.
Specimen 31 is an example of the architectural variety
known as freestone, which is merely a fine-grained,
light-colored, uniform sandstone, not very hard, and
breaking with about equal freedom in all directions.
The consolidation of sandstones is due chiefly to chemical
action. The cementing materials are commonly
either: ferruginous (iron oxides), giving red or brown
sandstones; calcareous, forming soft sandstones, which
effervesce with acid if the cement is abundant; or
siliceous, making very strong, light-colored sandstones.
Ferruginous sandstones are the most valuable for architectural
purposes; for, while not excessively hard, they
have a very durable cement. Siliceous sandstones are
too hard; and the calcareous varieties crumble when
exposed to the weather because the cement is soluble
in water containing carbon dioxide, as all rain-water
does. Specimen 32 is a good example of a ferruginous
sandstone, and it is coarse enough so that we can see
that each grain of quartz is coated with the red oxide
of iron. The mica scales visible here and there in this
specimen are interesting as showing that the grains are
not necessarily all quartz; and it is important to observe
that the mica was not made in the sandstone, but, like
the quartz, has come from some older rock.
Quartzite.—This rock is simply an unusually hard
sandstone. Now the hardness of any rock depends
upon two things: (1) the hardness of the individual
grains or particles; and (2) the firmness with which
they are united one to another. Therefore, the hardest
sandstones must be those in which grains of quartz
.pn +1 // 076.png
are combined with an abundant siliceous cement; and
that is precisely what we have in a typical quartzite,
such as specimen 33. Quartzite is distinguished, in
the hand-specimen, from ordinary quartz by its granular
texture (compare specimens 15 and 33); and of
course in large masses the stratification is an important
distinguishing feature.
3. Argillaceous group.—Just as the conglomerate
group shades off gradually into the arenaceous group,
so we find it difficult to draw any sharp line of division
between the arenaceous group and the argillaceous,
but we pass from the largest pebble to the most minute
clay-particle by an insensible gradation. For the sake
of convenience, however, we draw the line at the limit
of visibility, and say that in the true clay and slate the
individual particles are invisible to the naked eye; in
other words, these rocks have a perfectly compact texture,
while the two preceding groups are characterized
by a granular texture. Although clay, like sand and
gravel, may be of almost any composition, yet it usually
consists chiefly, often entirely, of the mineral kaolin.
The reason for this is easily found. Quartz resists both
mechanical and chemical forces, and is rarely reduced
to an impalpable fineness; but all the other common
minerals, such as feldspar, hornblende, mica, and calcite,
on account of their cleavage and inferior hardness,
are easily pulverized; but it is practically impossible
that this should happen without their being broken up
chemically at the same time. Decomposition follows
disintegration; and, while calcite is completely dissolved
and carried away, the other minerals are reduced,
as we have seen, to impalpable hydrous silicates of
.pn +1 // 077.png
aluminum, i.e., to kaolin. Hence, we find that the
fragmental rocks are composed principally of two minerals,
quartz and kaolin,—the former predominating in
the conglomerate and arenaceous groups, and the latter
in the argillaceous group.
Clay.—That kaolin is the basis of common clay is
proved by the argillaceous odor, which is so characteristic
of moist clay. Pure kaolin clay is white and impalpable,
like China clay; but pure clays are the exception.
They often become coarse and gritty by admixture
with sand, forming loam; and they also usually
contain more or less carbonaceous matter, which makes
black clays; or more or less ferrous oxide, which
makes blue clays; or more or less ferric oxide, which
makes red, brown, and yellow clays. By mixing these
coloring materials in various proportions, almost any
tint may be explained. Clays are sometimes calcareous,
from the presence of shells and shell-fragments or of
pulverized limestone. These usually effervesce with
acid, and are commonly known as marl. It is the
calcareous material in a pulverulent and easily soluble
condition that makes the marls valuable as soils.
Slate.—Consolidated clay. The compact texture
and argillaceous odor are usually sufficient to prove
this. To get the odor we need simply to breathe upon
the specimen, and then smell of it. We find all
degrees of induration in clay. It sometimes, as every
one knows, becomes very hard by simple drying; but
this is not slate, and no amount of mere drying will
change clay into slate; for, when moistened with water,
the dried clay is easily brought back to the plastic
state. To make a good slate, the induration must be
.pn +1 // 078.png
the result of pressure, aided probably to some extent
by heat. True slate, then, is a permanently indurated
clay which will not soak up and become soft when wet.
Slate is usually easily scratched with a knife, and it
is distinguished from limestone by its non-effervescence
with acid. As we should expect, it shows precisely the
same varieties in color and composition as clay. A
good assortment of colors is afforded by the roofing-slates.
Specimen 34 is a typical slate, for it not only
has a compact texture and argillaceous odor, but it is
very distinctly stratified. The stratification is marked
by alternating bands of slightly different colors, and is
much finer and more regular than we usually observe
in sandstone, and of course entirely unlike the stratification
of conglomerate. These differences are characteristic.
Some slates, however, are so homogeneous
that the stratification is scarcely visible in small pieces.
Thus the roofing-slates (specimen 35) rarely show the
stratification; for it is an important fact that the thin
layers into which this variety splits are entirely independent
of the stratification. This is the structure
known as slaty cleavage; it is not due to the stratification,
but is developed in the slate subsequently to its
deposition, by pressure. Some roofing-slates, known
as ribbon-slates, show bands of color across the flat surfaces.
These bands are the true bedding, and indicate
the absolute want of conformity between this structure
and the cleavage. Few rocks are richer in fossils than
slate, and these prove that it is a stratified rock.
Slate which splits easily into thin layers parallel with
the bedding is known as shale.
Porcelainite.—This is clay or slate which has been
.pn +1 // 079.png
baked or partially vitrified by heat so as to have the
hardness and texture of porcelain.
2. Chemically and Organically formed Rocks.—We
have already learned that from a geological point
of view the differences between chemical and organic
deposition are not great, the process being essentially
chemical in each case; and since the limestones and
some other important rocks are deposited in both
ways, it is evidently not only unnatural, but frequently
impossible, to separate the chemically from the organically
formed rocks. Unlike the fragmental rocks, the
rocks of this division not only admit, but require, a
chemical classification. This is natural because they
are of chemical origin; and it is practicable because,
with few exceptions, only one class of minerals is deposited
at the same time in the same place,—a very
convenient and important fact. Therefore our arrangement
will be mineralogical, thus:—
.nf b
(1) Coal Group.
(2) Iron-ore Group.
(3) Siliceous Group.
(4) Calcareous Group.
(5) Metamorphic Group (Silicates).
.nf-
Most of the silicate rocks are mixed, i.e., are each
composed of several minerals; but some silicate rocks
and all the rocks of the other divisions are simple, each
species consisting of a single mineral only.
(1) Coal Group.—These are entirely of organic
origin, and include two allied series, which are always
merely the more or less extensively transformed tissues
of plants or animals; viz.:—
.pn +1 // 080.png
Coals and Bitumens.—At the first lesson we examined
a sample of peat (specimen 8), and considered
the general conditions of its formation, peat being in
every instance simply partially decayed marsh vegetation.
It was also stated that, as during the lapse of
time the transformation becomes more complete, the
peat is changed in succession to lignite, bituminous
coal, anthracite, and graphite. The coals, indeed,
make a very beautiful and perfect series, whether we
consider the composition—there being a gradual, progressive
change from the composition of ordinary
woody fibre in the newest peat to the pure carbon in
graphite,—or the degree of consolidation and mineralization—since
there is a gradual passage from the light,
porous peat, showing distinctly the vegetable forms, to
the heavy crystalline graphite, bearing no trace of its
vegetable origin. This relation is easily appreciated
by a child, if a proper series of specimens is presented.
The coals also make a chronological series, graphite
and anthracite occurring only in the older formations,
and lignite and peat in the newer, while bituminous
coal is found in formations of intermediate age.
Bituminous coal is the typical, the representative
coal; and from a good specimen of this variety we
may learn two important facts:—
(1) That true coals, no less than peat, are of vegetable
origin. To see this we must look at the flat or
charcoal surfaces of the coal. These soil the fingers
like charcoal, and usually show the vegetable forms
distinctly.
(2) That coals are stratified rocks. These dirty
charcoal surfaces always coincide with the stratification,
.pn +1 // 081.png
being merely the successive layers of vegetation deposited
and pressed together to build up the coal; and
when we look at the edge of the specimen the stratification
shows plainly enough.
The bitumens form a similar though less perfect
series, beginning with the organic tissues, and ending,
in the opinion of some of the best chemists and mineralogists,
with diamond. In fact the coals and bitumens
form two distinct but parallel series. The coals are
exclusively of vegetable origin, while the bitumens are
largely of animal origin. The organic tissues in which
the two series originate are chemically similar,—the
animal tissues, which produce the lighter forms of bitumen,
however, containing more hydrogen and less
carbon and oxygen than vegetable tissues; while the
final terms, as just shown, are probably chemically
identical, being pure carbon,—graphite for the coals
and diamond for the bitumens; so that the entire process
of change in each series is essentially carbonization,
a gradual elimination of the gaseous elements,
oxygen and hydrogen, until pure solid carbon alone
remains.
The principal differences between the coals and
bitumens are the following:—
.in +8
.ll -8
.ti -4
Coals are rich in carbon, with some oxygen and little hydrogen.
.ti -4
Bitumens are rich in hydrogen, with some carbon and little or
no oxygen.
.ti -4
Coals are entirely insoluble.
.ti -4
Bitumens are soluble in ether, benzole, turpentine, etc., and the
solid forms are soluble in the more fluid, naphtha-like varieties.
.ti -4
Coals are never liquid, and cannot be melted or, with trifling
exceptions, even softened by heat.
.ti -4
Many bitumens are naturally liquid, and all become so on the
application of heat.
.pn +1 // 082.png
.ti -4
The coals partake of the characteristics of their chief constituent
element, carbon, the most thoroughly solid substance known;
while the bitumens similarly show the influence of hydrogen,
the most perfectly fluid substance known.
.ll
.in
The two bitumens of the greatest geological importance
are asphaltum or mineral pitch and petroleum;
but these substances are too familiar to require any
farther description here.
(2) Iron-ore Group.—These interesting and important
stratified rocks include the three principal
oxides of iron,—limonite, hematite, and magnetite,—as
well as the carbonate of iron, siderite; and the
rocks have essentially the same characteristics as the
minerals. In economical importance they are second
only to the coals; and the history of their formation
through the agency of organic matter is one of the
most interesting chapters in chemical geology (see
page #26#). The three oxides are easily distinguished
from each other by the colors of their powders or
streaks, and the magnetism of magnetite, and from
all other common rocks by their high specific gravity.
Magnetite is the richest in iron, and limonite the
poorest. As regards the degree of crystallization
and order of occurrence in the formations, they form
a series parallel with the coal series, thus:—
.in +8
.ll -8
.ti -4
Limonite, never crystalline, and found in recent formations.
.ti -4
Hematite, often crystalline, and found in older formations.
.ti -4
Magnetite, always crystalline, and found in oldest formations.
.ll
.in
Siderite effervesces with strong acid; and this separates
it from all other rocks, except limestone and
dolomite; and from these it is distinguished by its
.pn +1 // 083.png
high specific gravity. As a mineral, siderite is often
light colored; but as a rock it is always dark, and
usually black, from admixture chiefly of carbonaceous
matter. In studying dynamical geology, we have
learned (page #28#) the reason for the intimate association
of siderite with beds of coal, and this accounts
equally for the carbon contained in the rock itself.
The connection of this rock with the coal-formations
adds much to its value as an ore of iron.
Finally, the iron-ores, at least where of much economical
importance, are truly stratified. This can
often be seen in hand-specimens; and is well shown
by their relations to other rocks, in quarries and
mines; and in many cases, for limonite and hematite,
by the fossils which they contain.
(3) Siliceous Group.—These rocks are composed
of pure silica in the forms of quartz and opal. When
first deposited, whether organically, like tripolite, or
chemically, like siliceous tufa, the siliceous rocks are
soft and light, and the silica is in the form of opal.
Subsequently it changes to quartz, and the rocks assume
the much harder and denser forms of chert and
novaculite, respectively.
Tripolite or Diatomaceous Earth.—This interesting
rock is soft, light, and looks like clay; but it is
lighter, and the argillaceous odor is faint or wanting.
It does not effervesce with acid. Hence, it is neither
clay nor chalk. Notwithstanding its softness, it is really
composed of a hard substance, viz., silica, in the form
known as opal. By rubbing off a little of the dust, and
examining it under the microscope, we easily prove
that the silica is mainly or entirely of organic origin;
.pn +1 // 084.png
for the dust is seen to be simply a mass of more or less
fragmentary organic remains, occurring in great variety,
and of wonderful beauty and minuteness. There are
few rocks so unpromising on the exterior, and yet so
beautiful within. We have already learned that these
organic bodies are principally Diatom cases, Radiolaria
shells, and Sponge spicules. We can form some idea
of their minuteness from Ehrenberg’s estimate that a
single cubic inch of pure tripolite contained no less
than 41,000,000,000 organisms.
The lightness of tripolite (sp. gr., 1-1.5) is due to
the facts that opal is a light mineral (sp. gr., 1.9-2.2),
and that many of the shells are hollow. Tripolite is a
good example of a soft rock composed of a hard mineral;
and it owes its value as a polishing material to
the fact that it consists of a hard mineral in an exceedingly
fine state of division. Tripolite, when pure, is
snow-white; but it is rarely pure, being commonly
either argillaceous or calcareous. This rock is now
forming in thousands of places, in both fresh water
and the ocean.
Flint and Chert.—During the course of geological
time, beds of tripolite are gradually consolidated, chiefly
by percolating waters, which are constantly dissolving
and re-depositing the silica; and, finally, in the place
of a soft, earthy rock, we get a hard, flinty one, which
we call flint if it occurs in the newer, or chert if it
occurs in the older, geological formations. Besides
forming beds of nearly pure silica, which we call tripolite,
the microscopic siliceous organisms are diffused
more or less abundantly through other rocks, especially
chalk and limestone. In such cases the consolidation
.pn +1 // 085.png
of the silica implies its segregation also; i.e., the silica
dissolved by percolating water is deposited only about
certain points in the rock, building up rounded concretions
or nodules. Thus, a siliceous limestone becomes,
by the segregation of the silica, a pure limestone
containing nodules of chert, which are usually arranged
in lines parallel with the stratification. Specimen 16
is a fragment of a flint-nodule from the chalk-formation
of England.
Siliceous Tufa.—Hot water, and especially hot alkaline
water, circulating through the earth’s crust, is
always charged with silica dissolved out of the rocks;
and when such water issues on the surface in a hot
spring or geyser, it is cooled by contact with the air,
its solvent power is diminished thereby, and a large
part of the silica is deposited around the outlet as a
snowy-white porous material called siliceous tufa. Silica
deposited in this way is, like organic silica, always
in the form of opal. Siliceous tufa is distinguished
from clay, slate, chalk, and limestone by the same
tests as tripolite, and from tripolite itself by the absence
of microscopic organisms.
Novaculite.—Through the action of percolating
water and pressure, siliceous tufa, like tripolite, becomes
harder and denser and is thus changed to
novaculite, which holds the same relation to chemically
deposited silica that chert and flint do to organically
deposited silica. The white novaculite obtained
at the Hot Springs of Arkansas, and commonly known
as Arkansas stone, is a typical example of this rock.
The rock which, on account of the use to which it is
put, is known as buhr-stone, is also an excellent example
.pn +1 // 086.png
of chemically deposited silica. It is usually somewhat
porous and fossiliferous.
(4) Calcareous Group.—These are the lime-rocks,
including the carbonate of lime, in limestone and dolomite,
the sulphate of lime, in gypsum, and the phosphate
of lime, in phosphate rock. These rocks are
even more closely connected in origin than in composition;
and it is for this reason that rock-salt, which
of course contains no lime, is also included in this
group. Limestones are formed abundantly in the
open sea, through the accumulation of shells and
corals; but when portions of the sea become detached
from the main body and gradually dry up,
like the Dead Sea and Great Salt Lake, dolomite,
gypsum, and rock-salt are deposited in succession as
chemical precipitates. Phosphate rock may be regarded
as a variety of limestone, resulting from the
accumulation of the skeletons and excrement of the
higher animals.
Limestone.—This is the lithologic or rock form
of carbonate of lime or calcite, and one of the
most important, interesting, and useful of all rocks.
Although so simple in composition,—calcite being
the only essential constituent,—limestone embraces
many distinct varieties, and is really equivalent to a
whole family of rocks. A highly fossiliferous limestone,
such as specimen 38, is, perhaps, the best
variety with which to begin the study of the species.
The softness of the fossil shells of which the rock is
so largely composed, and the fact that they effervesce
readily with dilute acid, proves that they are still carbonate
of lime; and by applying the acid more carefully,
.pn +1 // 087.png
it can be seen that the compact matrix of the
rock also effervesces, consisting of shells more finely
broken or comminuted and mixed with more or less
clay and other impurity, almost the entire rock being
of organic origin.
On the coast of Florida, and in many other places, we
find beautiful examples of shell-limestone now in process
of formation. These are at first very open and
porous, because the interstices between the nearly entire
shells are not yet filled up with smaller fragments and
sand. But when that is done, we shall have a rock
similar to the old fossiliferous limestone. Specimen 37.
The shells and fragments, and the grains of calcareous
sand, are, as a rule, quickly cemented together
by the deposition of carbonate of lime between them;
so that limestone is nowhere observed occurring abundantly
in an unconsolidated form.
Limestone, as a rule, is not distinctly stratified in
hand-specimens, but of course that it is a true sedimentary
rock is abundantly proved by the fossils;
and it goes almost without saying that limestone, being
necessarily mainly composed of organic remains,
must be to a greater extent than any other rock the
great store-house of fossils; and in no other rock are
the fossils so well preserved and perfect as in limestone.
Nevertheless, there are extensive formations of limestone
containing no discernible traces of fossils. And
some of these non-fossiliferous limestones, too, are of
very recent formation. Some of the modern coral-reefs,
for example, are composed of limestone which
was formed only yesterday, as it were, and which, from
its mode of formation, must consist entirely of corals;
.pn +1 // 088.png
and yet it shows no trace of its organic origin, but is
perfectly compact, or, possibly, crystalline. This frequent
obliteration of the organic remains, as well as
the perfect consolidation of the rock, is attributed to
its solubility. The calcium carbonate is gradually dissolved
by the water, and then deposited in the interstices
in other parts of the rock.
Specimen 39 is that variety of limestone known as
chalk. It is soft and earthy, resembling both clay and
tripolite, but differing from the former in lacking the
distinct argillaceous odor, and from both by its lively
effervescence with acids. It appears to be entirely destitute
of organic remains, but this is a defect of our vision
and not of the rock; for, like the tripolite, it often
appears under the microscope to be little else than a
mass of shells. Tripolite is a deposit built up of the
siliceous shells of Diatoms and Radiolaria, while chalk
is chiefly composed of the similar but calcareous shells
of Foraminifera. Our specimen is from the Cretaceous
formation of England; but we have good reason to
believe that chalk is now forming on a very extensive
scale. There are millions of square miles in the deeper
parts of the ocean where the dredge brings up little
else but a perfectly impalpable, gray, calcareous slime
or ooze. When examined microscopically, this is seen
to be composed chiefly of Foraminifera shells, and
among these the genus Globigerina predominates; so
that the deposit is frequently called Globigerina ooze.
Now this gray, calcareous ooze, when dried and compacted
by pressure, makes a soft, white rock which
can scarcely be distinguished from chalk; in fact, it is
a modern chalk. And there seems no good reason
.pn +1 // 089.png
to doubt that the deposition of chalk has gone on continuously
since Cretaceous time—for several millions
of years at least.
Specimen 40 is also a white rock, easily scratched
with the knife, and effervescing freely with acid, and
therefore a variety of limestone. But its texture is very
different from the other varieties we have studied. It
has a sparkling surface, which we explain by saying that
the rock is crystalline. It is, in fact, a mass of minute
crystals of calcite. The crystalline limestones have
not always been crystalline, but it is safe to assume
that they were originally entirely uncrystalline, and in
many cases rich in fossils; but the fossils have been
mainly obliterated by the crystallization.
Crystallization generally in rocks is an indication of
great age, so that we usually say crystalline rocks
must be older than uncrystalline rocks of the same
composition; and this is mainly true with the limestones.
When the crystallization is rather fine, as in
our specimen, resembling granulated sugar, we have
what is commonly called saccharoidal limestone. This
is the typical marble. Marble is not a scientific name,
and the term is usually applied to any calcareous rock
which will take a polish, and sometimes even to rocks
which are not calcareous at all.
In the section on dynamical geology, we learned that
the carbonate of calcium or calcite is deposited from
the sea-water, and limestones formed, in two ways: first,
in a purely chemical way, where the water becomes
saturated with calcite; and, second, organically, where
the calcium carbonate is taken from the water by marine
organisms to form their shells and skeletons, and
.pn +1 // 090.png
the gradual accumulation of these on the ocean-floor
builds up a limestone. As before stated, the difference
between these two methods of deposition is not so
great as it often seems, because we know that the animals
never make the carbonate of calcium which they
secrete, but it comes into the sea ready made with the
drainage from the land.
The limestones forming at the present time are
almost wholly organic; but the rock known as calcareous
tufa is an exception. This is formed under
the same general conditions as siliceous tufa, but much
more abundantly, and in cold water as well as warm;
because calcite is far more soluble (especially in water
containing carbon dioxide) than opal or quartz. It is
deposited, not only around the mouths of springs, but
also along the beds of the streams which they form,
enveloping stones, roots, grasses, etc., and building up
usually a loose, spongy mass having a very characteristic
turfaceous texture.
The principal accessory minerals occurring in limestone
are: (1) kaolin, forming argillaceous or slaty limestone,
which may be recognized by the argillaceous
odor and dark color; (2) quartz, forming siliceous
or cherty limestone, known by its hardness or by the
nodules of flint or chert; (3) dolomite, forming dolomitic
or magnesian limestone, which effervesces less
freely with acid; and (4) serpentine, forming serpentinic
limestone, which is sharply distinguished by the
green grains of serpentine mingled with the white calcite.
A concretionary texture is common with limestone.
If the concretions are small, like mustard-seed,
we call the rock oölite; if larger, like peas, pisolite.
.pn +1 // 091.png
Dolomite.—If for calcite, which is the sole essential
constituent of all limestone, we substitute the allied
mineral dolomite, we have the rock dolomite. As
might be inferred from its composition, dolomite is
very closely related to limestone, although there are
some important differences. Physically, the two rocks
differ about as the two minerals do. Dolomite is
harder than limestone, and being also less soluble, it
resists the action of the weather more. Dolomite, if
pure, effervesces feebly, or not at all, with cold dilute
acid. Here, however, we have to recognize the fact
that dolomite is rarely pure; but there exists, in consequence
of the admixture of calcite, a perfectly gradual
passage from pure dolomite to pure limestone, and
parallel with this every degree of vigor in the reaction
with acid. Hence, it is entirely an arbitrary matter
as to where we shall draw the line between dolomitic
limestone and calcareous dolomite. Dolomite is a very
much less abundant rock than limestone, and, unlike
limestone, it rarely contains many fossils, and is never
of organic origin; i.e., there are no organisms which
secrete the mineral dolomite to form their hard parts
or skeletons. Like gypsum and rock-salt, dolomite
is probably never deposited in the open ocean, but
only in closed basins. Like limestone, it occurs with
both the compact and the crystalline textures.
Gypsum.—When pure, this rock (specimen 36) is
identical with the mineral gypsum (specimen 17), except
that it is rarely crystalline. It is usually, however,
not only perfectly compact, but more or less dark-colored
from the admixture of clay and other impurities.
Its most notable characteristics are its softness, the
.pn +1 // 092.png
absence of the argillaceous odor, except where it contains
much clayey impurity, and its non-effervescence
with acids. The first two usually serve to distinguish
it from slate, while the acid test separates it readily
from limestone and all other carbonate rocks. The
deposition of gypsum is purely chemical, and it occurs
under about the same physical conditions as the deposition
of salt; i.e., in drying-up portions of the sea.
Hence we usually find gypsum associated with beds
of rock-salt; and, since drying-up seas are few in
number, and small compared with the whole extent
of the ocean, we can easily understand why neither
rock-salt nor gypsum are abundant rocks, except in
a few localities.
Rock-Salt.—This interesting and useful rock, as we
have already learned, is deposited in a purely chemical
way, and only in drying-up portions of the sea, like the
Dead Sea, Great Salt Lake, etc. In some parts of
Europe there are beds of solid rock-salt over a hundred
feet thick.
Phosphate Rock.—Although not specially abundant
or attractive, this rock is of great economic interest
and importance on account of its extensive use as a
fertilizer. Under the general head of phosphate rock
are included: (1) the typical guano, which is the
consolidated excrement of certain marine birds inhabiting
in great numbers small coral islands in the
dry or rainless regions of the tropics; (2) the underlying
coral rock, which is often changed to phosphate
rock through the percolation of the rain-water falling
on the guano; (3) accumulations of the bones and
coprolites of the higher animals; (4) phosphatic limestones
.pn +1 // 093.png
from which the carbonate of lime has been
largely dissolved away, leaving the more insoluble
phosphate of lime.
(5) Metamorphic Group (stratified silicates).—All
the chemically and organically formed rocks which
we have studied up to this point are simple, i.e.,
they consist each of only one essential mineral; but
most of the rocks in this great group of silicates are
mixed, or consist each of several essential minerals.
Quartz is the only important constituent of these rocks
which is not, strictly speaking, a silicate, but in a certain
sense it is also not an exception, since it may
always be regarded as an excess of acid in the rock.
This group of stratified rocks composed of silicate
minerals is of exceptional importance, first, on account
of the large number of species which it includes, and,
second, on account of the vast abundance of some of
the species. These are, above all others, the rocks of
which the earth’s crust is composed. With unimportant
exceptions, all the rocks of this group are crystalline;
and they constitute the principal part of what is
generally included under the term metamorphic rocks—a
general name for all stratified rocks which have been
so acted upon by heat, pressure, or chemical forces as
to make them crystalline. Although the crystalline
limestone, dolomite, iron-ores, etc., show us that metamorphic
rocks are not wanting in the other groups.
As already explained, the metamorphic or crystalline
stratified rocks are usually older than the corresponding
uncrystalline rocks; but a point of greater importance
here is this: the development in the silicate rocks of
crystalline characters has usually made it impossible to
.pn +1 // 094.png
determine the method of their deposition, whether
mechanical or chemical. In a few cases, as with the
rock greensand, we know that the deposition is chemical;
while it is equally certain that such common
silicate rocks as gneiss, mica schist, and many others,
often result from the crystallization of ordinary mechanical
sediments, like sandstone and conglomerate.
We classify all these rocks as of chemical origin, however,
without considering the mode of their deposition,
because the subsequent crystallization is itself essentially
a chemical process; and that justifies us in saying
that these rocks are made what they now are chiefly
by the action of chemical forces. Whatever they were
originally, they have become, through their crystallization,
rocks having a definite mineral composition
which can be classified chemically.
Some of the details of the classification of this group,
as shown in the table, require explanation. In studying
the silicate minerals it was stated to be important
to recognize two classes—the acidic and the basic—the
dividing line falling in the neighborhood of 60 per
cent. of silica. This division is important simply because
Nature has in a great degree kept the acidic and
basic minerals separate in the rocks; and few things in
lithology are more important than the distinction of the
silicate rocks in which acidic minerals predominate
from those in which basic minerals predominate. The
amount of silica which any rock of this group contains
is shown at a glance by the chart. The vertical broken
lines, with the figures at the top, indicate the proportion
of silica, which increases from 30 per cent. on the
right to 85 per cent. on the left; so that the percentage
.pn +1 // 095.png
of silica which a rock contains determines its position,
the acidic species being on the left, and the basic on
the right. As most of these rocks are composed of
two or more minerals mixed in very various proportions,
there is usually a wide range in the percentage of silica
which the same species may contain; and this is expressed
in each case by the length of the dotted line
under the name of the rock. Thus, in syenite, the silica
ranges from 55 per cent. to 65 per cent. The horizontal
line in the chart separates the gneisses, containing
feldspar as an essential constituent, from the schists, in
which feldspar is wanting, except as an accessory constituent.
We will take up the gneisses first.
Gneiss.—This is the most important of all rocks.
It forms not far from one-half of New England, and a
very large proportion of the earth’s crust. The name
(pronounced same as nice) is known to have originated
among the Saxon miners, but its precise derivation
is lost in obscurity. To find out what this very
important rock is, we will consult specimen 41. The
first glance shows us that it is not, like the rocks we
have just been studying, composed of a single mineral,
but of several minerals, the most conspicuous of which
is the pink feldspar—orthoclase. This we recognize
as a feldspar: (1) by its hardness, which is a little less
than that of quartz, and distinguishes it from calcite,
a mineral having the general appearance of feldspar;
(2) by its color, which separates it from hornblende
and augite; and (3) by its cleavage, which distinguishes
it easily from quartz. Finally, we know it is orthoclase,
and not plagioclase, by its general aspect, and by its
association with an abundance of quartz, which is the
.pn +1 // 096.png
next most important constituent of the rock. The
quartz is less abundant than the orthoclase, and more
easily overlooked, yet anyone familiar with the mineral
will not fail to recognize it. It forms small,
irregular, glassy grains, entirely devoid of cleavage, and
scratching glass easily. On weathered surfaces of the
rock the orthoclase becomes soft and chalky, while the
quartz remains clear and hard, and then the two minerals
are very easily distinguished. Besides these,
there are numerous black, thin, glistening scales, which
we can easily prove to be elastic, and recognize as
mica.
In most books on the subject, these three minerals—orthoclase,
quartz, and mica—are set down as the
normal or essential constituents of gneiss. But it is
now recognized by the best lithologists that we may
have true gneiss without any mica; or we may have
hornblende in the place of mica. Quartz and orthoclase
are the only essential constituents of gneiss; and
when these alone are present, we have the variety
known as binary gneiss. The addition to these essential
constituents of mica, gives micaceous gneiss; and
of hornblende, hornblendic gneiss. Of these three
principal varieties, the micaceous gneiss is by far the
most common and important. The mica may be
either the white species, muscovite, or the black species,
biotite; but it is usually the former.
Orthoclase is the predominant constituent in all typical
gneiss, usually forming at least one-half of the rock.
The orthoclase may, however, be replaced to a greater
or less extent by albite, or even by oligoclase. But we
frequently see the term gneiss carelessly, or ignorantly,
.pn +1 // 097.png
applied to rocks which are destitute of feldspar, though
having the general aspect of gneiss.
Augite rarely occurs in gneiss; and hence, when we
observe a gneiss containing a black mineral which we
know is either augite or hornblende, it is pretty safe to
call it the latter.
Mica and hornblende, although the principal, are
not the only, accessory minerals in gneiss; but the following
species are also of common occurrence: garnet,
cyanite, tourmaline, fibrolite, epidote, and chlorite.
Gneisses, as the table indicates, exhibit a wide range
in the proportion of silica which they contain, varying
from 60 to 85 per cent.; and there is a concomitant
variation in specific gravity, from about 2.5 in the most
acidic to 2.8 in the most basic varieties.
That gneiss is a true, stratified rock is very clearly
shown in specimen 41; but, unfortunately, the stratification
is not always so evident as in this case. The
mica-scales, it will be observed, lie parallel with the
stratification, and assist very materially to make it visible;
and gneisses containing little or no mica, as well
as some that are rich in mica, frequently appear almost
or quite unstratified. These obscurely stratified varieties
are commonly known as granitoid gneiss, having the
texture and general aspect of granite. The sedimentary
origin of gneiss is also clearly proved by its interstratification
with undoubted sedimentary rocks, such
as limestone, iron-ores, graphite, quartzite, etc.
Syenite.—This is a much abused term, but, as now
employed by the best lithologists, it is the name of a
rock having a single essential constituent, viz., orthoclase.
Syenite in its simplest variety contains nothing
.pn +1 // 098.png
but orthoclase; but in addition we usually have either
hornblende, forming hornblendic syenite, or mica,
forming micaceous syenite.
Syenite, it will be observed, is equivalent to gneiss
with the quartz removed; but, while gneiss is the most
abundant of all rocks, syenite is a comparatively rare
rock; and this is simply another way of saying that
nearly all orthoclase is associated with quartz. By
admixture of quartz we get a perfectly gradual passage
from syenite to gneiss. The orthoclase in syenite is
more frequently replaced by plagioclase than it is in
gneiss. In syenite, too, hornblende is much more
abundant than mica; although just the opposite is
true in gneiss. And, again, in gneiss the mica is principally
muscovite; but in syenite it is almost exclusively
biotite. Augite is a common accessory in the more
basic syenite; but garnet, tourmaline, and the other
accessory minerals, occurring so frequently in gneiss,
are almost unknown in syenite. The specific gravity
of syenite varies from 2.7 to 2.9.
Diorite.—This is a more important rock than syenite;
but it is of analogous, though more basic, composition,
containing a single essential constituent, viz.,
plagioclase. Any of the triclinic feldspars may occur
in this rock, but oligoclase is most common. Like
syenite, diorite usually contains hornblende, often in
large proportion, forming hornblendic diorite, which
sometimes passes into rocks composed entirely of
hornblende. It also, but less frequently, contains
mica, forming micaceous diorite. The mica is usually
biotite, rarely muscovite. Mica and hornblende also
often occur together in diorite, and the same is true of
.pn +1 // 099.png
syenite and gneiss. Quartz is of common occurrence
in the more acidic varieties of diorite, and augite in the
more basic.
This is a good example of a basic rock, for all its
normal constituents are basic; but the percentage of
silica varies from 45 in those varieties richest in labradorite
and augite to 60 or more in those containing
more or less quartz and orthoclase. There is a corresponding
change of color from dark to light, and of
specific gravity from 2.7 to 3.1.
Diorite is not rich in accessory minerals; besides
those already mentioned, the most important are chlorite,
epidote, pyrite, and magnetite.
Few rocks are more clearly stratified than diorite,
whether we consider the hand-specimen, or its relations
to other formations. It is an abundant rock in New
England.
Norite.—Like diorite, this is essentially a plagioclase
rock; but there are, nevertheless, important differences.
The plagioclase in diorite is mainly the
more acidic species, like oligoclase; while in norite
the more basic species, such as labradorite and anorthite,
predominate. Hornblende, which we have
observed to be an important and rather constant constituent
of diorite and syenite, is much less abundant
in norite; but its place is taken by augite and the
allied minerals, hypersthene and enstatite. Black mica
is common in norite; but white mica, orthoclase, and
quartz rarely occur.
Norite is the most basic of all the feldspathic rocks,
as gneiss is the most acidic; while syenite and diorite
stand as connecting links, forming a gradual passage
.pn +1 // 100.png
between the two extremes. Thus, in passing from
gneiss to norite, we have observed a gradual diminution
of the quartz, a gradual change in feldspar from
orthoclase to the most basic plagioclase; at first a
gradual increase in hornblende, and then a gradual
change from hornblende to augite; and, finally, a
gradual substitution of black mica for white. The
amount of silica has decreased over 40 per cent.; and
the specific gravity has increased from 2.5 in the lightest
gneiss to at least 3.2 in the heaviest norite. We
have also passed from light colored rocks to dark;
and from those resisting atmospheric action to those
easily decomposed.
The most characteristic accessory constituents of
norite, besides those already mentioned, are magnetite
and chrysolite; though garnet, serpentine, and pyrite
often occur. In texture, this rock varies from compact
to very coarsely crystalline. The specimen of labradorite
(No. 23), from the norite of Labrador, affords
some idea of the coarseness of the crystallization in
much of this rock. It is not a common rock, except
in certain regions, the best known of which in eastern
North America are the coast of Labrador, various
points in Canada north of the St. Lawrence, and the
eastern border of the Adirondack Mountains. In hand-specimens,
norite rarely appears stratified; but in the
solid ledges the stratification is often as distinct as
could be desired.
Many lithologists call the rocks here designated
norite gabbro, and class them all in the eruptive
division as essentially a coarse variety of diabase.
.pn +1 // 101.png
In a similar manner, diorite and syenite are denied a
place in the sedimentary series. But the stratified
plagioclase rocks seem to have as strong a claim to
recognition as gneiss.
We turn now to the important and interesting division
of the non-feldspathic rocks or schists.
Mica Schist.—This is, next to gneiss, the most
abundant rock in New England. Specimen 43 is a
typical example, and from it we can readily learn what
mica schist is. A glance suffices to show that it is
chiefly composed of mica, but not entirely; for, on
carefully examining the edges of the specimen, we cannot
fail to see thin layers of hard, glassy quartz interwoven
with the mica. The quartz layers are short and
overlapping, and we have here a good illustration of
the schistose texture; this is, in fact, a typical schist.
Mica schist usually consists, as in this instance, of
mica and quartz; but it may be composed of mica
alone; and sometimes kaolin or clay takes the place
of the quartz, forming argillaceous mica schist. The
mica in the latter is usually in very fine scales and
rather inconspicuous, and the rock often passes into
ordinary clay slate. Similarly, when the mica becomes
deficient in the quartzose mica schist, a passage into
ordinary quartzite is the result. A little feldspar is
sometimes present in the rock, which thus passes into
micaceous gneiss. Specimen 43 contains several crystals
of red garnet, giving the variety garnetiferous mica
schist. There is no other rock that contains such a
large variety of beautiful accessory minerals as mica
schist; and for the mineralogist it is one of the most
attractive rocks. Few rocks are more distinctly stratified;
.pn +1 // 102.png
and the stratification can usually be observed in
hand-specimens. The mica in these rocks may be
either muscovite or biotite, or both; but the former is
most common. No rock shows a greater variation in
the percentage of silica which it contains than mica
schist, as we pass from varieties which are nearly all
quartz to those which are nearly all mica.
Closely related to mica schist is the rock now known
as hydromica schist, in which the ordinary anhydrous
micas are replaced by hydromica. It is distinguished
from mica schist by being somewhat softer, less harsh
to the touch, and less lustrous. It is to be regarded
usually as an incipient mica schist, which has not yet
become anhydrous; though it may sometimes be just
the reverse; viz.: an old mica schist which has become
hydrated through the action of meteoric waters. It
contains fewer accessory minerals than mica schist.
Hornblende Schist.—This is a stratified aggregate
of hornblende and quartz. The quartz is granular and
in thin layers, as in mica schist; but the micaceous
structure is wanting, and consequently the rock does
not cleave readily in the direction of the bedding.
The hornblende is mostly finely crystalline, but sometimes
occurs in large, bladed crystals. Garnet and
some other minerals are of common occurrence in the
rock; but it is not rich in accessories like mica schist.
The chief difficulty in recognizing this rock consists in
determining whether the white mineral is all quartz or
partly feldspar. In the latter case, of course, it becomes
a hornblendic gneiss.
Amphibolite (Hornblende Rock).—This is the name
applied to a rock having hornblende as its sole essential
.pn +1 // 103.png
constituent. Hornblende schist sometimes passes
into amphibolite, through the absence of quartz; and so
does diorite, when the feldspar is deficient or wanting.
Specimen 20, though small, is a typical example of
this rock. The physical and chemical characteristics
are essentially the same as for the mineral hornblende.
The texture varies from coarsely to finely crystalline.
The crystals are usually short and thick, and lie in all
directions in the rock, which is thus very massive, the
schistose texture being entirely wanting, and the stratification
rarely showing in small masses. Biotite is a
common accessory in amphibolite, and garnet and
magnetite frequently occur.
By the substitution of augite for hornblende, in the
description of amphibolite, we get the much rarer, but
otherwise very similar, rock, pyroxenite.
Talc Schist (Steatite or Soapstone).—Although not
abundant, this is a useful and familiar rock. The
composition is implied in the name; and by comparing
it with the specimen of talc (No. 58) we can readily
see that they are essentially identical. Typical talc
schist is pure talc; but the talc is often mixed with
more or less quartz or feldspar; and mica, chlorite,
hornblende, garnet, and other minerals are of common
occurrence.
This rock embraces two distinct varieties, the massive
and the schistose, or foliated. The former is the
common soapstone (specimen 71), which is a confused
mass of crystals lying in all directions, and with
no visible stratification in the small mass. In the latter,
as in specimen \ \ \ \ , the talc scales lie in parallel planes,
giving the rock a micaceous structure, and causing it
.pn +1 // 104.png
to split easily in the direction of the stratification. The
cleavage surfaces are often wavy or corrugated; and
the same is true of all schistose rocks. Talc schist is
easily distinguished from all other rocks by its light-grayish
or greenish color, combined with its extreme
softness, and its smooth, slippery feel.
Chlorite Schist.—The one essential constituent of
this rock is chlorite, and the mineral specimen (No. 26)
answers equally well as an example of the rock. As
with talc schist, quartz, feldspar, and hydromica are
rarely entirely absent. Besides these, the principal
accessories are hornblende, magnetite, garnet, and
epidote. This rock also agrees with talc schist in presenting
two principal varieties, the massive and the
schistose. It is easily distinguished from talc schist by
its darker color and streak, which are very characteristic;
while its green color, softness, and unctuous feel
separate it from all other rocks.
This is the most basic of all the silicate rocks; but,
in consequence of containing a large proportion of
water, it is not the heaviest. It is, in fact, interesting
and important to observe that all these hydrous silicate
rocks—talc schist, chlorite schist, greensand, and
serpentine—are distinctly lighter in each case than
anhydrous rocks containing the same proportion of
silica. They are also notable, as a class, for their softness,
smooth feel, and green color.
Serpentine.—As the name implies, this rock is simply
the mineral serpentine occurring in large masses, and
its characteristics are precisely the same. It is fine-grained,
massive, compact, rather soft, but very tough,
and varies in color from very dark green to light
.pn +1 // 105.png
greenish-yellow. The dark colors predominate, and
specimen 25 is a typical example.
Serpentine is often intimately associated with limestone
and dolomite. The white veins running irregularly
through the variety known as Verd Antique
Marble, however, are not calcite, as commonly supposed,
but magnesite. They do not effervesce freely
with cold, dilute acid, for the entire rock is magnesian,
and it is probable have been at one time simply cracks
along which water holding carbon dioxide has penetrated,
changing the magnesia from a silicate to a
carbonate.
Geologists were, at one time, almost unanimous in
the opinion that all serpentine is of eruptive origin;
but now it is conceded by the great majority to be in
some cases a sedimentary rock. It is found interstratified
with gneiss, limestone, all the schists, and many
other stratified rocks. When occupying the position
of an eruptive it is never an original rock; but has
been formed by the alteration, in situ, of some basic
anhydrous rock, most commonly olivine basalt.
Greensand.—This rock (specimen 27) consists
chiefly of the mineral glauconite, mingled usually with
more or less sand, clay, or calcareous matter. It is
usually very friable, or in an entirely unconsolidated
state. It is most abundant in the newer geological
formations, especially the Cretaceous and Tertiary; and
is, perhaps, the only one of the stratified silicate rocks
now forming on an extensive scale in the ocean. Its
value as a fertilizer, for which purpose it is extensively
employed, is due to the potash that it contains.
Following is a systematic summary of the mineralogical
.pn +1 // 106.png
composition of the rocks of this great division
of silicates; and this, combined with the classification
on page #69#, presents in a condensed form all the more
important facts contained in the preceding descriptions.
Only the more constant and normal constituents of the
species are enumerated in each case:—
.if t
.nf b
====================+====================================
Names of Species. | Constituent Minerals.
--------------------+------------------------------------
⎧| Orthoclase and Quartz.
Gneiss ⎨| Orthoclase, Quartz, and Mica.
⎩| Orthoclase, Quartz, and Hornblende.
--------------------+------------------------------------
⎧| Orthoclase.
Syenite ⎨| Orthoclase and Hornblende.
⎩| Orthoclase and Mica.
--------------------+------------------------------------
⎧| Plagioclase (chiefly Oligoclase).
Diorite ⎨| Plagioclase and Hornblende.
⎩| Plagioclase and Mica.
--------------------+------------------------------------
⎧| Plagioclase (chiefly Labradorite).
Norite ⎨| Plagioclase and Augite (Diallage).
⎩| Plagioclase and Mica.
--------------------+------------------------------------
⎧| Mica.
Mica Schist ⎨| Mica and Quartz.
⎩| Mica and Kaolin.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Hornblende Schist | Hornblende and Quartz.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Amphibolite | Hornblende.
Pyroxenite | Pyroxene.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Talc Schist | Talc.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Chlorite Schist | Chlorite.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Serpentine | Serpentine.
--------------------+------------------------------------
Greensand | Glauconite.
====================+====================================
.nf-
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.li
Names of Species. | | Constituent Minerals. |
| ⎧ | Orthoclase and Quartz. |
Gneiss | ⎨ | Orthoclase, Quartz, and Mica. |
| ⎩ | Orthoclase, Quartz, and Hornblende. |
| ⎧ | Orthoclase. |
Syenite | ⎨ | Orthoclase and Hornblende. |
| ⎩ | Orthoclase and Mica. |
| ⎧ | Plagioclase (chiefly Oligoclase). |
Diorite | ⎨ | Plagioclase and Hornblende. |
| ⎩ | Plagioclase and Mica. |
| ⎧ | Plagioclase (chiefly Labradorite). |
Norite | ⎨ | Plagioclase and Augite (Diallage). |
| ⎩ | Plagioclase and Mica. |
| ⎧ | Mica. |
Mica Schist | ⎨ | Mica and Quartz. |
| ⎩ | Mica and Kaolin. |
Hornblende Schist | | Hornblende and Quartz. |
Amphibolite | | Hornblende. |
Pyroxenite | | Pyroxene. |
Talc Schist | | Talc. |
Chlorite Schist | | Chlorite. |
Serpentine | | Serpentine. |
Greensand | | Glauconite. |
.li-
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.pn +1 // 107.png
.sp 2
.h5
2. Eruptive or Unstratified Rocks.
The rocks of this great class are formed by the cooling
and solidification of materials that have come up
from a great depth in the earth’s crust in a melted and
highly heated condition. When the fissures in the
earth’s crust reach down to the great reservoirs of
liquid rock, and the latter wells up and overflows on
the surface, forming a volcano, then we may, as was
pointed out on page #33#, divide the eruptive mass into
two parts: first, that which has actually flowed out on
the surface, and cooled and solidified in contact with
the air, forming a lava flow; second, that which has
failed to reach the surface, but cooled and solidified
in the fissure, forming a dike.
Lava flows or volcanic rocks and dikes or plutonic
rocks are identical in composition; but there is a vast
difference in texture, due to the widely different conditions
under which the rocks have solidified. The
dike or fissure rocks solidify under enormous pressure,
and this makes them heavy and solid—free from pores.
They are surrounded on all sides by warm rocks: this
causes them to cool very slowly, and allows the various
minerals time to crystallize. Other things being equal,
the slower the cooling the coarser the crystallization;
and hence, the greater the depth below the surface at
which the cooling takes place, the coarser the crystallization.
The volcanic rock, on the other hand, cools under
very slight pressure; and the steam, which exists abundantly
in nearly all igneous rocks at the time of their
eruption, is able to expand, forming innumerable small
.pn +1 // 108.png
vesicles or bubbles in the liquid lava; and these remain
when it has become solid. Cooling in contact with the
air, the lava cools quickly, and has but little chance
for crystallization. Hence, to sum up the matter, we
say: plutonic rocks are solid and crystalline; and volcanic
rocks are usually porous or vesicular, and
uncrystalline.
As we descend into the earth’s crust, it is perfectly
manifest that the volcanic must shade off insensibly
into the dike rocks, and we find it impossible to draw
any but an arbitrary plane of division between them;
but this is no argument against this classification, for,
as already stated, all is gradation in geology, and we
experience just the same difficulty in drawing a line
between conglomerate and sandstone, or between gneiss
and mica schist, as between the dike rocks and volcanic
rocks.
We will now observe to what extent the distinctions
between these two great classes of eruptives can
be traced in the rocks themselves, beginning with the
dike rocks. But first it is important to notice the
general fact, clearly expressed in the classification, that,
with perhaps some trifling exceptions which need not
be mentioned here, all eruptive rocks are silicates, and
nearly all are feldspathic silicates. They are of definite
mineralogical composition, and, like the chemically and
organically formed stratified rocks, can be classified
chemically. But, although there are eruptives corresponding
closely in composition to the feldspathic silicates,
which we have just studied, we find among them
little to represent the non-feldspathic silicates, and
nothing corresponding in composition to the limestones,
.pn +1 // 109.png
dolomites, gypsum, flint, tripolite, siliceous tufa,
iron-ores, bitumens or coals.
1. Plutonic (Dike) Rocks.—These are also known
as the ancient eruptive rocks, and for this reason: It
is impossible, of course, for us to observe them except
where they occur on or near the earth’s surface. But,
since they are formed wholly below the surface, and
usually at great depths in the earth, it is evident that
they can appear on the surface only as the result of
enormous erosion; and erosion is a slow process, demanding,
in these cases, many thousands or millions
of years. Therefore, the more ancient dike rocks alone
are within our reach; those of recent formation being
still deeply buried in the earth’s crust. It follows, as
a corollary to this explanation, that the coarseness of
the crystallization of any dike rock must be a rough
measure of its age and of the amount of erosion which
the region has suffered since its eruption.
As regards composition, the dike rocks present, as
already stated, essentially the same combinations of
minerals as the feldspathic silicates of the stratified
series, but occurring under different physical conditions
and having a widely different origin. The only
important difference in texture between the two classes
of rocks is that the sedimentary rocks are stratified
and the dike rocks are not; and when we consider
that the dike rocks sometimes present a laminated
structure that resembles stratification, while the sedimentary
rocks frequently appear unstratified, it is easy
to understand why, in the absence of any marked difference
in composition, geologists have often found it
difficult to distinguish the two classes of rocks. We
.pn +1 // 110.png
also find here the explanation and the justification of
the fact that the names of the dike rocks are in most
cases the same as those of the sedimentary rocks of
similar composition.
Granite.—Granite (from the Latin granum, a grain)
is a crystalline-granular rock, agreeing in composition
with gneiss. The essential constituents are quartz and
orthoclase; and when they alone are present we have
the variety binary granite. Mica, however (commonly
muscovite, sometimes biotite, and frequently both) is
usually added to these, forming micaceous granite
(specimen 44); and often hornblende, forming hornblendic
granite (specimen 45). The orthoclase is
sometimes replaced in part by triclinic species, especially
albite and oligoclase. Accessory minerals are not
so abundant in granite as in gneiss; but, besides those
named, garnet, tourmaline, pyrite, apatite, and chlorite
are most common. Orthoclase is always the predominant
ingredient; and, except when there is much hornblende
present, usually determines the color of the
granite. Thus, specimens 44 and 45 are gray because
they contain gray orthoclase; while all red granites
contain red or pink orthoclase. The quartz has usually
been the last of the constituents to crystallize or solidify;
and, having been thus obliged to adapt itself to the contours
of the orthoclase and mica, it is rarely observed
in distinct crystals.
In texture, the granites vary from perfectly compact
varieties, approaching petrosilex, to those which are
so coarsely crystalline that single crystals of orthoclase
measure several inches in length. Of course
one of the most important things to be observed
.pn +1 // 111.png
about granite, especially in comparing it with gneiss, is
the complete absence of anything like stratification;
that, as before stated, being the only important distinction
between the two rocks. Gneiss is the most
abundant of all stratified rocks, and granite stands in
the same relation to the eruptive series.
Syenite.—This is an instance where stratified and
eruptive rocks, agreeing in composition, have the same
name. That rocks consisting of orthoclase, of orthoclase
and hornblende, or of orthoclase and mica, i.e.,
having the composition of syenite, do occur in both
the eruptive and stratified series there can be no doubt.
They should, however, have distinct names on account
of their unlike origins; and would have but for the
practical difficulty in determining, in many cases,
whether the rock is stratified or not. The best that
we can do now, when we desire to be specific, and
have the necessary information, is to say stratified
syenite or eruptive syenite, as the case may be.
Diorite.—Here, again, we find identity of names,
as well as of composition, between the two great series.
Eruptive diorite is an abundant and well known rock,
and consists of the same minerals as stratified diorite
combined in the same proportions. Diorite includes
a large part of the dike rocks commonly known as
“trap” and “greenstone.” The principal accessories
are chlorite, epidote, pyrite, magnetite, apatite, and
quartz. The texture varies from perfectly compact or
felsitic to coarsely crystalline; averaging, however, less
coarse than syenite and granite.
Diabase.—By referring to the classification it will be
seen that diabase occupies the same position among
.pn +1 // 112.png
the dike rocks as norite among the stratified rocks.
Like norite it consists usually of the more basic varieties
of plagioclase with or without augite, diallage, or
hypersthene. Augite, or one of its representatives, is
usually present, and is often the principal constituent.
Specimen 1 shows a somewhat equal development of
the feldspar and augite. The name gabbro is sometimes
applied to the coarser and more feldspathic diabases,
and especially to those containing diallage or
hypersthene in the place of common augite. In the
opinion of some high authorities, however, it is unnecessary
to recognize two species here; and it makes
the classification more simple and symmetrical not to
do it. The principal accessories in diabase are biotite,
chlorite, magnetite, pyrite, calcite, and olivine. Chlorite
is often an important constituent, giving the rock
a greenish aspect; but here, as well as in diorite, the
chlorite is due chiefly or entirely to the alteration of
the augite and feldspar; and the chloritic varieties of
diorite and diabase together make up the old species
“greenstone.” Similarly, the more compact and darker
varieties of these two rocks, forming regular, wall-like
dikes, are known as “trap.” Specimen 46.
In consequence of their more basic composition,
diabase and diorite are usually strongly contrasted with
granite and syenite in color and specific gravity, being
darker and heavier. The basic rocks, too, decay much
more readily than the acidic.
2. Volcanic Rocks.—As regards composition, we
shall find nothing new in the volcanic series; for the
rocks of this group present essentially the same combination
of minerals as the dike rocks. In composition,
.pn +1 // 113.png
the dike and volcanic rocks are identical; but in
texture, as already explained, there is a vast difference.
The volcanic rocks differ so widely in texture from both
the dike and stratified species, that there is rarely any
difficulty in distinguishing them; and hence they have
in every instance distinct names.
Volcanic rocks are rarely found in this part of the
world; and specimens of most of them are difficult
to obtain. For this reason they can only be noticed
briefly here, since it is the plan of this Guide to give
especial attention only to those portions of the subject
which can be illustrated by material within easy reach
of teachers.
Rhyolite.—This rock corresponds in composition
with granite and gneiss, but is less frequently micaceous.
The orthoclase in rhyolite, and generally in volcanic
rocks, is the clear, pellucid variety—sanidine. It is
more difficult to separate from quartz than ordinary
orthoclase, the chief distinguishing feature being its
cleavage. Plagioclase and hornblende are common,
but not abundant, constituents. The mica, when present,
is usually biotite. The texture of rhyolite is often
more or less distinctly porphyritic, having a finely crystalline
or granular matrix, with interspersed crystals of
sanidine and quartz. The rock has usually a rough,
harsh feel; and while the coarser varieties have the
aspect of granite, the finer approach petrosilex; but
all are somewhat porous, which is seen in the lower
specific gravity of rhyolite as compared with granite
and gneiss.
Trachyte.—In texture and general aspect rhyolite
and trachyte are nearly identical. Trachyte, however,
.pn +1 // 114.png
is darker, contains little or no quartz, and more hornblende
and plagioclase. In fact, it agrees in composition
with syenite. This is one of the most important
of the volcanic rocks.
Obsidian.—Obsidian is sharply distinguished from
all other rocks by its perfect vitreous texture; it is a
true volcanic glass. Its surface (specimen 47) is smooth
and glassy, and its fracture eminently conchoidal. To
the naked eye, and usually under the microscope, the
typical variety is perfectly homogeneous; chemical
analysis, however, shows that it has the composition,
commonly of rhyolite, but sometimes of trachyte.
Obsidian is, in fact, simply rhyolite or trachyte which,
cooling quickly, has not had time to crystallize, but
has remained permanently in the amorphous or glassy
state. The composition is sometimes partially revealed
where a portion of the sanidine comes out in distinct
crystals porphyritically interspersed through the glass.
The homogeneity of the texture is sometimes disturbed:
by numerous minute concentric cracks, forming what
is known as perlitic structure and the variety perlite;
by numerous small spherical concretions, forming the
spherulitic structure and the variety spherulite; and
also by the banding, which is the result of flowing
while in a plastic state, whereby portions of the glass
of slightly different colors are drawn out into layers and
interlaminated. The bands are rarely continuous for
any distance, being usually merely elongated lenticular
streaks. The glassy state is generally one of inferior
density, and hence we find that obsidian is lighter than
the crystalline rocks of the same composition. Obsidian
is a good illustration of a non-essential color, for its
.pn +1 // 115.png
capacity and jet-black color are due entirely to impurities.
In very thin flakes it is transparent and white.
It also forms a white powder when crushed, i.e., it has
a white streak.
Obsidian is often vesicular, from the expansion of
the steam and other gases which it contained when
liquid. The most thoroughly vesicular varieties are
known as pumice (specimen 48). The vesicular texture,
by rendering the rock impervious to light, conceals
the impurities, and thus we get a snow-white
pumice from black obsidian. The vesicles are frequently
elongated, sometimes in a definite direction,
though often forming an irregular net-work of glassy
fibres. Pumice is often light enough to float on water,
and it is transported thousands of miles by the oceanic
currents. It is employed in the arts, and good specimens
can be obtained at almost any drug-store.
Petrosilex and Felsite.—Sharply defined groups
are unknown in lithology, but all is gradation; and
between rhyolite and trachyte, which are always more
or less distinctly crystalline, and obsidian, which is a
true glass and perfectly amorphous, there is no break.
It is impossible to draw a sharp line and say, Here
the vitreous texture ends and the crystalline begins;
for the transition is not abrupt, but gradual. We
recognize, really, in these feldspathic rocks, an intermediate
state, which is neither crystalline nor colloid,
but both; and this lithologists have designated the
felsitic texture. Felsitic matter cannot, even with the
highest powers of the microscope, be resolved into
separate grains or particles; and it does not exhibit,
except perhaps very indistinctly, the phenomenon of
.pn +1 // 116.png
double refraction. In other words, it is not truly crystalline
or stony, and yet it is just as clearly not amorphous
or glassy.
Feldspathic rocks exhibiting the felsitic texture in
whole or in part are known as felsites. Many high
authorities hold that true felsites are found only among
the eruptive rocks; while others claim that they are
in part, or wholly, of sedimentary origin. The writer
accepts the former view. The felsites are in part acid
lavas which have cooled too slowly to form a true glass,
like obsidian, and yet too quickly to become truly crystalline,
like rhyolite and trachyte. But they are also
in large part simply devitrified obsidian. Glass is an
unstable form of mineral matter; and every species
of glass, including obsidian, tends with the lapse of
time to become crystalline or stony, the amorphous
changing to the felsitic structure. Thus, in many
cases or usually, what we now call felsites were originally
true glassy obsidian. Being perfectly intimate
mixtures of the component minerals, the composition
of felsites can usually be determined with certainty
only by means of chemical analysis. By this means
chiefly, it has been proved that there are felsites agreeing
in composition with both rhyolite and trachyte.
There is this general difference in composition, however,
between these crystalline rocks and the felsites;
viz.: mica, hornblende, and augite are generally wanting
in the latter. From this it follows that the felsites
are, with unimportant exceptions, composed either of
quartz and feldspar or of feldspar alone.
The physical differences between the felsites of unlike
composition are not great; but they are sufficient
.pn +1 // 117.png
to warrant the division of the felsites into two species:
a basic species, to which the term felsites may properly
be restricted; and an acidic species, for which petrosilex
is a very appropriate name. According to this
arrangement, felsite is composed chiefly of orthoclase,
and, as the table shows, agrees in composition with
trachyte; while petrosilex consists mainly of orthoclase
and quartz, agreeing in composition with rhyolite.
We find here nothing new in composition; but
petrosilex and felsite are simply the crystalline rocks
which we have already studied, repeated under a different
texture.
The typical felsite or petrosilex is composed entirely
of felsitic matter, and is perfectly homogeneous, like
flint or jasper, which it closely resembles in hardness
and other physical characteristics. As a rule, however,
the rock is not entirely homogeneous, but there is a
manifest tendency in the component minerals, and
especially in the feldspar, to separate out, usually in
the form of crystals. In the banded variety (specimen
42) the rock is built up of thin layers, which are often
alternately quartzose and feldspathic. There is not a
perfect separation of the minerals; but that the quartz
is chiefly in the dark layers, and the feldspar in the
light, is shown by the way in which the layers are
affected by the weather.
One of the most common varieties is where a portion,
frequently a large portion, of the feldspar comes
out in the form of distinct, separate crystals, producing
a porphyritic texture. Specimens 5, 6, and 7 are
examples of porphyritic felsite; and after examining
these we can no longer doubt that feldspar is an important
.pn +1 // 118.png
constituent of the rock. Petrosilex and felsite
are more generally porphyritic than any other rocks;
and they are commonly called porphyry. It is better,
however, since almost any rock may be porphyritic,
and since this texture cannot be correlated with any
particular composition, not to use porphyry as a rock-name,
but simply as the name of a very important
rock-texture. The banded and porphyritic textures
are about equally characteristic of petrosilex and felsite.
In petrosilex, quartz, as well as feldspar, is sometimes
porphyritically developed, forming the variety known
as quartz-porphyry. There is no limit to the proportion
of the quartz and feldspar which may crystallize
out in this way, and thus we find a perfectly gradual
passage from normal petrosilex or felsite to thoroughly
crystalline granite and syenite.
Andesite.—This rock has nearly the texture of rhyolite
and trachyte, but is darker and heavier, and
corresponds in composition to diorite, consisting of
plagioclase and hornblende, with usually more or less
sanidine, quartz, augite, biotite, and magnetite.
Basalt.—The rock bearing this familiar name represents
diabase among the dike rocks. It is the most
basic of the volcanic rocks, and consists of the more
basic varieties of plagioclase, especially labradorite,
with augite, magnetite, and titanic iron. Olivine is a
very common and characteristic constituent, and the
plagioclase is often replaced in part by leucite and
nephelite. The basalts are usually black, and of high
specific gravity; and vary in texture from compact to
coarsely crystalline. The contraction due to cooling
frequently results in the development of a columnar
.pn +1 // 119.png
structure of remarkable regularity, the columns being
normally hexagonal and standing perpendicularly to
the cooling surfaces of the mass. This structure occurs
in other eruptive rocks, but is most characteristic of
basalt.
Tachylite.—Tachylite is a highly basic volcanic
glass, standing in the same relation to basalt and andesite
that obsidian does to trachyte and rhyolite. It is
much heavier than obsidian, and is perfectly black and
opaque, except in the finest fibres. It is a comparatively
rare rock, for the reason that basalt and andesite
crystallize more readily than the acidic rocks on passing
from the liquid to the solid state. On the surface
of the basic lava, however, where it is in contact with
the air, and congeals almost instantly, a film of glass
is formed; but this may not be more than a small fraction
of an inch in thickness. Like obsidian, tachylite
is often vesicular; but the vesicular basic rocks, as well
as the solid, are usually stony. They occur in vast
abundance in many volcanic regions, and may be considered
the typical lava (specimen 49).
In the more ancient lavas, the vesicles are frequently
filled by various minerals—chlorite, epidote, quartz,
calcite, etc.—deposited by infiltrating waters, and derived
in most cases from the decomposition of the
original constituents of the rock. Thus the vesicular
is changed to the amygdaloidal texture, and the lava
becomes an amygdaloid (specimen 50). The amygdaloidal
texture is common in the basic lavas and rare
in pumice, simply because the former are more readily
decomposed and contain a greater variety of bases from
which secondary minerals can be formed.
.pn +1 // 120.png
Porphyrite and Melaphyr.—These two rocks hold
essentially the same relation as regards origin and
structure to the basic lavas that petrosilex and felsite
do to the acidic lavas. Porphyrite agrees in composition
with andesite, and melaphyr with basalt. They
are usually dark-colored rocks having a compact or
felsitic texture. Porphyrite is, as the name implies,
very commonly porphyritic; while melaphyr is often
vesicular or brecciated, exhibiting all the structural
features of tachylite and basalt, and being in its older
forms very generally amygdaloidal.
Volcanic Tuff and Agglomerate.—Besides the crystalline,
glassy, and felsitic lavas, already described, and
due chiefly to the rate of cooling of the liquid rock,
we may recognize a fourth class to include the very
abundant lavas which, during explosive eruptions, are
ejected in the solid state, being violently blown out of
the crater in the form of dust and fragments. Falling
on the slopes of the volcano or over the surrounding
country, as in the case of the buried city of Pompeii,
the fragmental lavas remain largely unstratified. But
when, as frequently happens, they fall into the sea,
they are assorted by the waves and currents and
arranged in layers after the manner of ordinary sediments,
with which they are often more or less mixed.
Before they become consolidated the finer fragmental
lava, of whatever composition, is called volcanic dust,
and the coarser lapilli or volcanic sand; while the
consolidated materials are known as tuff and agglomerate
respectively.
.pn +1 // 121.png
.pb
.sp 4
.h2
SUPPLEMENT TO LITHOLOGY.
.pm ic chapter_title.png 100px
.sp 4
.h3
VEIN ROCKS.
.sp 2
All rocks are not embraced in the sedimentary and
eruptive divisions, but there is a third grand division,
which, although rarely mentioned or recognized in the
more comprehensive works on geology, it is deemed best
not to leave entirely unnoticed here. These are the vein
rocks. They present an immense number of varieties, and
yet, taken altogether, form but a small fraction of the
earth’s crust. They are, however, the great repositories
of the precious and other metals, and hence are objects of
far greater interest to the miner and practical man than the
eruptive rocks, or, in some parts of the world, even than
the sedimentary rocks.
The vein rocks, like the eruptive rocks, occupy fissures
in the earth’s crust intersecting the stratified formations;
but the fissures filled with vein rocks are called veins, and
not dikes. We will first notice the mode of formation of
a typical vein, and then examine its contents. Geologists
are agreed that water penetrates to a very great depth in
the earth’s crust. All minerals are more or less soluble
in water; and we may consider the water circulating
through the rocks, especially at considerable depths, as,
in most cases, a saturated solution of the various minerals
of which they are composed. Very slight changes in the
conditions will cause saturated solutions to deposit part of
their mineral load. The water at great depths has a high
temperature, and is subjected to an enormous pressure;
.pn +1 // 122.png
and both of these circumstances favor solution. Suppose,
now, that these hot subterranean waters enter a fissure in
the crust and flow upwards, perhaps issuing on the surface
as a warm mineral spring; as they approach the surface,
the temperature and pressure, and consequently their solvent
power, are diminished; and a portion of the dissolved
minerals must be deposited on the walls of the
fissure, which thus becomes narrower, and in the course
of time is gradually filled up. The vein is then complete;
and the mineral waters are forced to seek a new outlet.
Veins have the same general forms as dikes, since the
fissures are formed in the same way for both; but the
vein is of slow growth, and may require ages for its
completion, while the dike is formed in an hour or a day.
It is now generally believed that water is an important
agent in the formation of eruptive rocks; since they all
contain water at the time of their eruption; and since it
has been demonstrated that, while ordinary rocks require
a temperature of 2000° to 3000° for their fusion in the absence
of water, they are liquified at temperatures below
1000° in the presence of water. In other words, common
rocks are very infusible and insoluble bodies, and heat and
water acting independently have little effect upon them;
but when fire and water are combined in what is now
known as aqueo-igneous fusion, they prove very efficient
agents of liquefaction.
If we adopt these views, then it can be shown that, in
origin, veins and dikes differ in degree only, and are not
fundamentally unlike; and the formation and relations of
the three great classes of rocks may be summarized as
follows:—
The ocean and atmosphere, operating on the earth’s surface,
have worked over and stratified the crust, until the
sedimentary rocks have now an average thickness variously
estimated at from ten to thirty or forty miles. This entire
thickness of stratified rocks, and a considerable depth of
.pn +1 // 123.png
the underlying unstratified crust, must be saturated with
water; and all but the more superficial portions of this
water-soaked crust must be very hot, the temperature
increasing steadily downwards from the surface. Both
eruptive and vein rocks originate in this highly heated,
hydrated crust. Eruptive rocks are formed when the heat,
aided by more or less water, softens the rocks, either
stratified or unstratified, by aqueo-igneous fusion, and the
plastic materials are forced up through fissures to or toward
the surface. Vein rocks are formed when the water,
aided by more or less heat, dissolves the rocks, either
stratified or unstratified, by what may be called igneo-aqueous
solution, and subsequently deposits the mineral
matter in, i.e., on the walls of, fissures leading up to or
toward the surface. In the case of the dike rocks, heat is
the chief agent, and water merely an auxiliary; while with
the vein rocks it is just the reverse. But between the two
it is probably impossible to draw any sharp line.
The water circulating through the crust, and saturated
with its various mineral constituents, has been called the
“juice” of the crust; and veins are formed by the concentration
of this earth-juice in fissures. One of the most
important characteristics of the vein rocks, as a class, is
the immense variety which they present; for nearly every
known mineral is embraced among their constituents; and
these are combined in all possible ways and proportions,
so that the number of combinations is almost endless.
The solvent power of the subterranean waters varies for
different minerals; and appears often to be greatest for
the rarer species. In other words, there is a sort of selective
action, whereby many minerals which exist in stratified
and eruptive rocks, so thinly diffused as to entirely
escape the most refined observation, are concentrated in
veins in masses of sensible size; and our lists of known
minerals and chemical elements are undoubtedly much
longer than they would be if these wonderful storehouses
.pn +1 // 124.png
of fine minerals which we call veins had never been
explored. As a rule, the minerals in veins form larger
and more perfect crystals than we find in either of the
other great classes of rocks. This is simply because the
conditions are more favorable for crystallization in veins
than in dikes or sedimentary strata. In both dike and
stratified rocks, the growing crystals are surrounded on all
sides by solid or semi-solid matter; and, being thus hampered,
it is simply impossible that they should become
either large or perfect. In the vein, on the other hand,
there are usually no such obstacles to be overcome; but
the crystals, starting from the walls of the fissure, grow
toward its centre, their growing ends projecting into a
free space, where they have freedom to develop their normal
forms and to attain a size limited only, in many cases,
by the breadth of the fissure. With, possibly, some rare
exceptions, all the large and perfect crystals of quartz,
feldspar, mica, beryl, apatite, fluorite, and of minerals
generally, which we see in mineralogical cabinets, have
originated in veins. Those fissures which become the
seats of mineral veins are really Nature’s laboratories for
the production of rare and beautiful mineral specimens;
and hence the vein rocks are the chief resort of the mineralogist,
to whom they are of far greater interest than all
the eruptive and stratified rocks combined.
The leading characteristics, then, of the vein rocks may
be summarized as follows: (1) They contain nearly all
known minerals, including many rare species and elements
which are unknown outside of this class of rocks. (2)
These mineral constituents, occurring singly and combined,
give rise to a number of varieties of rocks so vast
as to baffle detailed description. (3) They exceed all
other rocks in the coarseness of their crystallization, and
in the perfection and beauty of the single crystals which
they afford.
.pn +1 // 125.png
.sp 4
.h3
PETROLOGY.
.sp 2
In lithology we investigate the nature of the materials
composing the earth’s crust—the various minerals
and aggregates of minerals, or rocks; while in
petrology we consider the forms and modes of arrangement
of the rock-masses,—in other words, the architecture
of the earth.
Petrology is the complement of lithology, and in
many respects it is the most fascinating division of
geology, since in no other direction in this science are
we brought constantly into such intimate relations with
the beautiful and sublime in nature. The structures of
rocks are the basis of nearly all natural scenery; for
what we call scenery is usually merely the external
expression, as developed by the powerful but delicate
sculpture of the agents of erosion—rain and frost,
rivers and glaciers, etc.—of the geological structure
of the country. And to the practised eye of the geologist,
a fine landscape is not simply a pleasantly or
grandly diversified surface, but it has depth; for he
reads in the superficial lineaments the structure of the
rocks out of which they are carved.
But, while the magnitude of the phenomena adds
greatly to the charm of the study, it also increases the
difficulties and taxes the ingenuity of the teacher whose
work must be done indoors. According to our ideal
method, natural science ought to be taught with natural
specimens; and yet here our main reliance must
be upon pictures and diagrams.
Nature, however, has not been wholly unmindful of
our needs; for she has worked often upon a very
.pn +1 // 126.png
small as well as a very large scale; many of the grandest
phenomena being repeated in miniature. Thus
we observe rock-folds or arches miles in breadth and
forming mountain masses, and of all sizes from that
down to the minutest wrinkle. So with veins, faults,
etc. And the wonderful thing is that these small examples,
which may be brought into the class-room,
are usually, except in size, exactly like the large. Now
the aim of every teacher in this department should be
to secure a collection of these natural models. It is
not an easy thing to do, except one has plenty of
time; for they can rarely be purchased of dealers, but
must usually come as the choicest fruit of repeated
excursions to the natural ledges and quarries, the seashore
and the mountains. But for the difficulty of
getting the specimens there is some compensation,
since it may be truly said that for the collector specimens
obtained in this way have an interest, a value,
and a power of instruction beyond what they would
otherwise possess.
.sp 2
.h4
Classification of Structures.
The structures of rock divide, at the outset, into two
classes:—(1) the original structures, or those produced
at the same time and by the same forces as the
rocks themselves, and which are, therefore, peculiar
to the class of rocks in which they occur (e.g. stratification,
ripple-marks, fossils, etc.); and (2) the subsequent
structures, or those developed in rocks subsequently
to their formation, and by forces that act more
or less uniformly upon all classes of rocks, and which
.pn +1 // 127.png
are, therefore, in a large degree, common to all kinds
of rocks (e.g. folds, faults, joints, etc.).
The original structures are conveniently and naturally
classified in accordance with the three great classes
of rocks: (1) stratified rocks, (2) eruptive rocks, and
(3) vein rocks; while the subsequent structures, not
being peculiar to particular classes of rocks, are properly
divided into those produced by (1) the subterranean
or igneous agencies, and (2) the superficial or
aqueous agencies.
.pm hi fig_01 390px "Fig. 1.—Section through sediment deposited by rain in a roadside pool: a. surface of roadway; b. layer of small pebbles and coarse sand; c. fine sand passing into d; d. the finest sand and mud."
.sp 2
.h5
Original Structures of Stratified Rocks.
Stratification.—All rocks formed by strewing
materials in water, and their deposition in successive,
parallel, horizontal layers, are stratified; and this
structure is their stratification. It is the most important
of all rock structures; and there is no kind of
structure the origin of which is more fully or certainly
.pn +1 // 128.png
known. The deposition of sediment in carefully assorted
horizontal layers is readily brought within the comprehension
of children by simple experiments with sand
and clay in water; and still better by the examination
of the deposits formed in roadside pools during heavy
rains (#Fig. 1:fig_01#), and by digging into beaches and sandbars,
which every child will recognize as formed of
materials arranged by water. Great stress should be
laid upon the fact that a lake like Erie or Champlain
is simply a large pool with several more or less turbid
streams flowing into it, while the single stream flowing
out is clear, the sediment having evidently been deposited
in the lake; and that every lake is, like the
roadside pool, being gradually filled up with sedimentary
or stratified rocks. But the ocean is a still larger
pool, receiving mud and sand from many streams; and
since we know that nothing escapes from the ocean but
invisible vapor, it is plain that the mud and sand and
all other kinds of sediment carried into the ocean must
be deposited on its floor, and chiefly, as we have seen,
on that part nearest the land. The consolidation of
beaches, bars, and mud-flats is all that is necessary to
convert them into stratified formations of conglomerate
sandstone and slate.
Let us notice now, more particularly, the causes of
visible stratification. As we can easily prove by an
experiment with clay in a bottle of water, if the same
kind of material is deposited continuously there will
be no visible stratification in the deposit. It will be
as truly stratified as any formation, but not visibly so;
because there is nothing in the nature of the material
or the way in which it is laid down to bring out distinct
.pn +1 // 129.png
lines of stratification. Continuous and uniform deposition
obtains very frequently in nature, but rarely continues
long enough to permit the formation of thick
beds or strata. Hence, while the stratification is almost
always visible on the large surfaces of sandstone, slate,
etc., exposed in quarries and railway cuttings, and
may usually be seen in the quarried blocks, it is often
not apparent in hand specimens, which may represent
a single homogeneous layer. There is one important
exception, and that is where the particles, although of
the same kind, are flat or elongated. Pebbles of these
forms are common on many beaches; and since they
are necessarily arranged horizontally by the action of
the water, they will, by their parallelism, make the
stratification of the pudding-stone visible. The same
result is accomplished still more distinctly by the mica
scales, etc., in sandstone and slates, the leaves and
flattened stems of vegetation in bituminous coal, and
the flat shells in limestone.
In all other cases, visible stratification implies some
change in the conditions; either the deposition was
interrupted, or different kinds of material were deposited
at different times. The first cause produces
planes of easy splitting, or fissility, especially in fine-grained
rocks, like shale. This shaly structure or
lamination-cleavage may be due, in some cases, to
pressure, but it is commonly understood to mean that
each thin layer of clay became partially consolidated
before the next one was deposited upon it, so that the
two could not perfectly cohere. Parallel planes of
easy splitting are, however, by themselves, of little
value as indications of stratification, since the lamination-cleavage
.pn +1 // 130.png
is not easily distinguished from slaty-cleavage
(roofing slate) and parallel jointing, structures
developed subsequently to the deposition of sediments
and quite independent of the stratification. The second
cause, or variations in the kind of sediment, gives
alternating layers differing in color, texture, or composition,
as is seen frequently in sandstone, slate, gneiss,
etc.; and of all the indications of stratification these
are the most important and reliable.
.pm hi fig_02 430px "Fig. 2.—Section showing strata and laminæ: a. conglomerate; b. sandstone; c. shale; d. limestone."
A layer composed throughout of essentially the same
kind of rock, as conglomerate or sandstone, and showing
no marked planes of division, is usually regarded
as one bed or stratum, although it may vary considerably
in texture or color; while the thinner portions
composing the stratum and differing slightly in color,
texture, and composition, and the thin sheets into
which shaly rocks split, are the laminæ or leaves. In
.pn +1 // 131.png
#Fig. 2:fig_02# the strata are designated by letters, and the fine
lines and rows of dots show the constituent laminæ, while
the whole section may be regarded as a small part of
a great geological formation. The geological record
is written chiefly in the sedimentary rocks; and the
formations, strata, and laminæ may be regarded as the
volumes, chapters, and pages in the history of the
earth. Now every feature of a rock, lithological or
petrological, finds its highest interest in the light which
it throws upon the history of the rock, i.e., upon the
conditions of its formation. Observe what the section
in #Fig. 2:fig_02# teaches concerning the geological history of
that locality; premising that any chapter of geological
history written in the stratified rocks should be
read from the bottom upwards, since the lowest strata
must have been formed first and the highest last. The
lowest stratum exposed is conglomerate, indicating a
shingle beach swept by strong currents which carried
away the finer material. Upwards, the conglomerate
becomes finer and shades off into sandstone, and finally
into shale, showing that the water has become gradually
deeper and more tranquil, the shore having, in consequence
of the subsidence, advanced toward the land.
The next two strata show that this movement is probably
reversed; at any rate, the currents become stronger
again, and the shale passes gradually into sandstone
and conglomerate. The beach condition prevails now
for a long time, and thick beds of sand and gravel are
formed. The sea then deepens again, and we observe
a third passage from coarse to fine sediment. This
locality is now remote from the shore, the gentle currents
bringing only the finest mud, which slowly builds
.pn +1 // 132.png
up the thick bed of shale, in the upper part of which
shells are abundant, indicating that the deposition of
mechanical sediment has almost ceased, and that the
shale is changing to limestone. The purity of the
limestone, and the crinoids and other marine organisms
which it contains, prove that this has now become
the deep, clear sea; and this condition is maintained
for a long period, for the limestone is very thick, and
this rock is formed with extreme slowness.
The most important point to be gained here is that
every line of stratification and every change in the
character of the sediments is due to some change of
corresponding magnitude in the conditions under which
the rock was formed. The slight and local changes
in the conditions occur frequently and mark off the
individual laminæ and strata, while the more important
and wide-spread changes determine the boundaries of
the groups of strata and the formations.
Strata are subject to constant lateral changes in texture
and composition, i.e., a bed or formation rarely
holds the same lithological characteristics over an extended
area. There are some striking exceptions,
especially among the finer-grained rocks, like slate,
limestone, and coal, which have been deposited under
uniform conditions over wide areas. It is the general
rule, however, particularly with the coarse-grained
rocks, which have been deposited in shallow water
near the land, that the same continuous stratum undergoes
great changes in thickness and lithological character
when followed horizontally. A stratum of conglomerate
becomes finer grained and gradually changes
into sandstone, which shades off imperceptibly into
.pn +1 // 133.png
slate, and slate into limestone, etc. Where the stratum
is conglomerate, its thickness will usually be much
greater and more variable than where it is composed
of the finer sediments. The rapidity of these changes
in certain cases is well shown by the parallel sections
in #Fig. 3:fig_03#. These represent
precisely the same
beds, as the connecting
lines indicate, at points
only twenty feet apart.
.pm hi fig_03 307px "Fig. 3.—Parallel sections showing rapid lateral changes in strata: c. clay; s. sand; ss. sandstone; l. lignite; f. fireclay."
When we glance at
the conditions under
which stratified rocks
are now being formed,
it is plain that all strata
must terminate at the
margin of the sea in
which they were deposited,
and in the marginal
portions of that
sea, especially, must
exhibit frequent and
rapid changes in composition,
etc. The sediments
forming the surface
of the sea-bottom
at the present time may
be regarded as belonging to one continuous stratum;
and it is instructive to examine a chart of any part of
our coast, such as Massachusetts Bay, on which the
nature of the bottom is indicated for each sounding,
and observe the distribution of the different kinds of
.pn +1 // 134.png
sediment. On an irregular coast like this, especially,
the gravel, sand, and mud of different colors and textures,
and the different kinds of shelly bottom, form a
patchwork, the patches being, for the most part, of
limited extent and shading off gradually into each
other.
On a more regular coast, like that of New Jersey,
the sediments are distributed with corresponding uniformity,
the changes are less frequent and more gradual,
and we have here a better chance to observe the
normal arrangement of the sediments along a line from
the shore seawards—gravel, sand, mud, and shells.
On the beach we find the shingle and coarse pebbles,
shading off rapidly into fine pebbles and sand. The
zone or belt of sandy bottom may vary in width from
a mile or two to twenty miles or more, becoming gradually
finer and changing into clay or mud, which
covers, usually, a much broader zone, sometimes extending
into the deeper parts of the sea, but gradually
giving way to calcareous sediments. Hence we may
say that the finer the sediment the greater the area
over which it is spread; but, on the other hand, the
coarser the sediment the more rapidly it increases in
thickness. In other words, the horizontal extent of a
formation deposited in any given period of time is
inversely, and the vertical extent or thickness is directly,
proportional to the size of the particles.
Observations made in deep wells and mines, and
where, by upturning and erosion, the edges of the
strata are exposed on the surface, show that the vertical
order of the different kinds of sedimentary rocks
in the earth’s crust is extremely variable. But when
.pn +1 // 135.png
we take a general view of a great formation, it is often
apparent that it consists chiefly of coarse-grained rocks
in the lower part and fine-grained rocks in the upper
part. This is, in general, a necessary consequence of
the fact that a great thickness of sediments can only
be formed on a subsiding sea-floor. Such a formation
must consist chiefly of shore deposits, and be deposited
near the shore where the sea is shallow. Hence, 10,000
feet of sediments implies nearly that amount of subsidence.
In consequence, the shore line and the several
zones of sediment advance towards the land; and sand
is deposited where gravel was at first, and as the subsidence
continues, both clay and limestone are finally
deposited over the original beach. When the sea-floor
rises, the order of the sediments is reversed;
and it will be observed that in consequence of the
advance and retreat of the shore-line, the formations
grow edgewise to a considerable extent.
.pm hi fig_04 600px "Fig. 4.—Overlap and unconformability."
Overlap and Interposition of Strata.—Another
consequence of the constant oscillation of the shoreline
is that successive deposits in the same sea will
often cover different and unequal areas. When, in
consequence of subsidence, one formation extends
beyond and covers the edge of another, as shown in
#Fig. 4:fig_04#, we have the phenomenon described as overlap.
.pn +1 // 136.png
Interposition is similar, being the case where a formation
(#Fig. 5:fig_05#, c.) does not, in certain directions,
cover so wide an area as the strata (b. d.) above
and below it, which are thus sometimes found in contact,
although normally separated by the entire thickness
of the intermediate and, seemingly, interposed
stratum.
.pm hi fig_05 600px "Fig. 5.—Interposition of strata."
Unconformability.—We have already seen that
the rocks on the land are being constantly worn away
by the agents of erosion; and it is also a matter of
common observation that the strata thus exposed are
often not horizontal, but highly inclined, having been
greatly disturbed and crumpled during their elevation.
Now, when such a land-surface subsides to form the
sea-bottom, and new strata are spread horizontally
over it, they will lie across the upturned and eroded
edges of the older rocks, and fill the hollows worn
out of the latter, as shown in #Fig. 6:fig_06#; and the new
.pn +1 // 137.png
formation is then said to rest unconformably upon the
older. Two strata or formations are unconformable
when the older has suffered erosion (#Fig. 6:fig_06#), or both
disturbance and erosion (#Fig. 4:fig_04#) before the deposition
of the newer.
.pm hi fig_06 600px "Fig. 6.—Unconformability."
When strata are conformable, the deposition may
be presumed to have been nearly or quite continuous;
but unconformability clearly proves a prolonged interruption
of the deposition during which the elevation,
erosion, and subsidence of the sea-bottom took place.
The section in #Fig. 7:fig_07# shows a second unconformability,
proving that the sea-bottom has here been lifted three
times to form dry land. An unconformability may
sometimes be clearly established when the actual contact
of the two formations cannot be seen, as where
the new formation is a conglomerate containing fragments
of the older.
Irregularities of Stratification.—These are especially
noticeable in sandstone and conglomerate,
which have been deposited chiefly by strong, local, and
variable currents; the kind and quantity of sediment,
of course, varying with the strength and direction of
the current. Two kinds of irregularity only may be
specially noticed here: (1) contemporaneous erosion
.pn +1 // 138.png
and deposit, where, in consequence of a change in the
currents, fine material recently deposited is partially
swept away and its place taken by coarser sediments;
and (2) oblique lamination, or current-bedding, where
the strata are horizontal as usual, but the component
laminæ are inclined at various angles. This structure
is characteristic of sediments swept along by strong
currents, especially when deposited in shallow basins
or depressions.
.pm hi fig_07 600px "Fig. 7.—Double Unconformability: q. quartzite; s. sandstone; d. drift."
.pn +1 // 139.png
Ripple-marks.—All who have been on a beach or
sand-bar must have noticed the lines of wavy ridges
and hollows, or ripples, on the surface of the sand.
These are sand-waves, produced by water moving over
the sand, or by air moving over dry sand, as ordinary
waves are formed by air moving over water. Each
tide usually effaces the ripple-marks made by its predecessor
and leaves a new series, to be obliterated
by the next tide. But where sediment is constantly
accumulating, a rippled surface may be gently overspread
by a new layer, and thus preserved. Other
series of ripples may, in like manner, be formed and
preserved in overlying layers; and when the beach
becomes a firm sandstone, a section of it will show the
rippled surfaces almost as distinctly as when they were
first formed (#Fig. 8:fig_08#). Ripple-marks are most perfect
in fine sand. They are not formed in gravel, because
it is too coarse; nor in clay, because it is too tenacious.
They are usually limited to shallow water; and are
always regarded as proving that the rocks in which
they occur are shallow-water or beach deposits. They
are normally at right angles to the current that produces
them, and where this changes with the direction
of the wind, cross-ripples and other irregularities are
introduced. Ripple-marks are also usually parallel
with the beach, and when they are found in the rocks
they give us the direction, as well as the position, of
the ancient shore-line.
Again, the friction of the water pushes the sand-grains
along, rolling them up on one side of the ripple
and letting them fall down on the other. Hence
ripples, formed by a current are always moving and are
.pn +1 // 140.png
unsymmetrical on the cross-section, presenting a long,
gentle slope toward the current, and a short, steep slope
away from it, the arrow in the figure indicating the
direction of the current, or of the sea in the case of a
beach. And we may thus learn from the fossil ripples,
in some cases, not only the position and direction of
the ancient shore, but also on which side the land lay,
and on which side the sea. When the water is in a
state of oscillation, without any distinct current, more
symmetrical ripples are produced.
.pm hi fig_08 590px "Fig. 8.—Ripple-marks in sandstone."
Rill-marks, Rain-prints, and Sun-cracks.—“One
of the most fascinating parts of the work of a field-geologist
consists in tracing the shores of former seas
and lakes, and thus reconstructing the geography of
successive geological periods.” His conclusions, as we
have already seen, are based largely upon the nature
of the sediments; but still more convincing is the evidence
afforded by those superficial features of the
strata, which, like ripple-marks, seem, by themselves,
quite insignificant. And among these he lays special
emphasis upon those which show that during their
deposition strata have at intervals been laid bare to
sun and air.
During ebb tide water which has been left at the
.pn +1 // 141.png
upper edge of the beach runs down across the beach
in small rills, which excavate miniature channels; and
when these are preserved in the hard rocks, they prove
that the latter are beach deposits, and, like the ripple-marks,
show the direction of the old shore.
If a heavy shower of rain falls on a muddy beach or
flat, the sediment deposited by the returning tide may
cover, without obliterating, the small but characteristic
impressions of the individual drops; and these markings
are frequently found well preserved in the hardest
slates and sandstones, testifying unequivocally to the
conditions under which the rocks were formed. In
some cases the rain-prints are found to be ridged up
on one side only, in such a manner as to indicate that
the drops as they fell were driven aslant by the wind.
The prominent side of the marking, therefore, indicates
the side towards which the wind blew.
Muddy sediments, especially in lakes and rivers,
are often exposed to the air and sun during periods of
drouth, and as they gradually dry up, polygonal cracks
are formed. The sediment of the next layer will fill
these sun-cracks; and when, as often happens, it is
slightly different from the dessicated layer, they may
still be traced. Sun-cracks preserved in this way are
very characteristic of argillaceous rocks, and, of course,
prove that in early times, as at the present day, sediments
of this class were exposed by the temporary
retreat of the water. The foot-prints or trails of land-animals
are often, as in the sandstones and shales of
the Connecticut Valley, associated with, and of course
strongly corroborate, all these other evidences of shore
deposits. From the foot-prints preserved in the rocks
.pn +1 // 142.png
we pass naturally to the consideration of the fossil
remains of plants and animals found entombed in the
strata.
Fossils.—Although fossils find their highest interest
in the light which they throw upon the succession of
life on the globe, they may also be properly regarded
as structural features of stratified rocks; and any one
who has seen the dead shells, crabs, fishes, etc., on
the beach will readily understand how fossils get into
the rocks. It is not our province here to study the
structure of the fossils themselves, for that would involve
us in a course in paleontology, a task belonging
to the biologist rather than the geologist; but we will
merely observe the three principal degrees in the
preservation of fossils:—
1. Original composition not completely changed.—Extinct
elephants have been found frozen in the river-bluffs
of Siberia so perfectly preserved that dogs and
wolves ate their flesh. The bodies of animals are also
found well preserved in peat-bogs. All coal is simply
fossil vegetation retaining in a large degree the original
composition; and the same is true of ferns, etc., preserved
as black impressions in the rocks. All bones
and shells consist of mineral matter which makes them
hard, and animal matter which makes them tough and
strong. In very many cases, especially in the newer
formations, the animal matter is still partially, and the
mineral matter almost wholly, intact.
2. Original composition completely changed, but form
and structure preserved.—All kinds of fossils are commonly
called petrifactions, but only those preserved in
this second way are truly petrified, i.e., turned to stone.
.pn +1 // 143.png
“Petrified wood is the best illustration, and in a good
specimen not only the external form of the wood, not
only its general structure—bark, wood, radiating silver-grain,
and concentric rings of growth—are discernible,
but even the microscopic cellular structure of the wood,
and the exquisite sculpturing of the cell-walls, are perfectly
preserved, so that the kind of wood may often
be determined by the microscope with the utmost
certainty. Yet not one particle of the organic matter
of the wood remains. It has been entirely replaced
by mineral matter; usually by some form of silica.
The same is true of the shells and bones of animals.”—Le
Conte.
3. Original composition and structure both obliterated,
and form alone preserved.—This occurs most
commonly with shells, although fossil trees are also
often good illustrations. The general result is accomplished
in several ways: (a) The shell after being
buried in the sediment may be removed by solution,
leaving a mould of its external form, (b) This mould
may subsequently be filled by the infiltration of finer
sediment, forming a cast of the exterior of the shell.
(c) The shell, before its solution, may have been filled
with mud; and if the shell itself is then dissolved, we
have a cast of its interior in a mould of its exterior.
Time required for the Formation of Stratified
Rocks.—Many attempts have been made to determine
the time required for the deposition of any given
thickness of stratified rocks. Of course, only roughly
approximate results can be hoped for in most cases;
but these are at least sufficient to make it certain that
geological time is very long. The average relative rate
.pn +1 // 144.png
of growth of different kinds of sediment is, however,
less open to doubt, for we have already seen that
coarse sediments like gravel and sand accumulate
much more rapidly than finer sediments like clay and
limestone; and we are sometimes able to compare
these two classes of rocks on a very large scale.
Thus, during what is known as the Paleozoic era, a
sea extended from the Blue Ridge to the Rocky Mountains.
Along the eastern margin of this sea, where the
Alleghany Mountains now stand, sediments—chiefly
conglomerate and sandstone, with some slate and less
limestone—accumulated to a thickness of nearly
40,000 feet. Toward the west, away from the old
shore-line, the coarse sediments gradually die out, and
the formations become finer and thinner. In western
Ohio and Indiana, slate and limestone predominate;
while in the central part of the ancient sea, in Illinois
and Missouri, the paleozoic sediments are almost
wholly limestones, and have a thickness of only 4000
to 5000 feet. In other words, while one foot of limestone
was forming in the Mississippi Valley, eight to
ten feet of coarser sediments were deposited in Pennsylvania.
The best estimates show that coral-reefs rise—i.e.,
limestones are formed on them—at the rate of about
one foot in two hundred years. But coral limestones
grow much more rapidly than limestones in general.
Sandstones sometimes accumulate so rapidly that trees
are buried before they have time to decay and fall
(#Fig. 9:fig_09#). Such a buried forest, like a coal-bed, represents
a land surface, and proves a subsidence of the
land; and in some cases, as indicated by the section,
.pn +1 // 145.png
repeated oscillations of the crust may be proved in
this way.
The mud deposited by the annual overflow of the
Nile is forty feet thick near the ancient city of Memphis;
and the pedestal of the statue of Rameses II.,
believed to have been erected B.C. 1361, is buried to
a depth of nine feet, four inches, indicating that 13,500
years have elapsed since the Nile began to spread
its mud over the sands of the
desert.
.pm hi fig_09 243px "Fig. 9.—Erect fossil trees."
But the greatest difficulty in
estimating the time required
for the formation of any series
of strata arises from the fact
that we cannot usually even
guess at the length of the
periods when the deposition
has been partially or wholly
interrupted. Now and then,
however, we find evidence that
these periods may be very long.
A layer of fossil shells in sandstone or slate proves an
interruption of mechanical deposition. Beds of coal,
fossil forests, and other indications of land surfaces
are still more conclusive. The interposition of strata
(#Fig. 5:fig_05#) proves a prolonged interruption of deposition
over the area not covered by the interposed bed. But
the most important of all evidence is that afforded by
unconformability; and the length of the lost interval
between the two formations is measured approximately
by the erosion of the older.
.pn +1 // 146.png
.sp 2
.h5
Original Structures of Eruptive Rocks.
The structures of this class are divisible into those
pertaining to the volcanic rocks and those pertaining
to the fissure or dike rocks. But since volcanoes are
rare in this part of the world, while dikes are well
developed in many sections
of our country, it
seems best to give our
attention chiefly to the
latter.
.pm hi fig_10 300px "Fig. 10.—Typical dikes."
.pm hi fig_11 300px "Fig. 11.—Section of a granite mass."
The term dike is a
general name for all
masses of eruptive rocks
that have cooled and
solidified in fissures or
cavities in the earth’s
crust. But the name is
commonly restricted to
the more regular, wall-like
masses (#Fig. 10:fig_10#),
those having extremely
irregular outlines, like
most masses of granite
(#Fig. 11:fig_11#), being known simply as eruptive masses.
The propriety of this distinction is apparent when we
consider the origin of dike as a geological term. It
was first used in this sense in southern Scotland, where
almost any kind of a wall or barrier is called a dike.
The dikes traverse the different stratified formations
like gigantic walls, which are often encountered by
the coal-miners, and on the surface are frequently left
.pn +1 // 147.png
in relief by the erosion of the softer enclosing rock,
so that in the west of Scotland, especially, they are
actually made use of for enclosures. In other cases
the dike has decayed faster than the enclosing rock,
and its position is marked by a ditch-like depression.
The narrow, straight, and perpendicular clefts or chasms
observed on many coasts are usually due to the removal
of the wall-like dikes by the action of the waves.
Dikes are sometimes mere plates of rock, traceable for
a few yards only; and they range in size from that up
to those a hundred feet or more in width, and traceable
for scores of miles across the country, their outcrops
forming prominent ridges. The sides of dikes
are often as parallel and straight of those of built walls,
the resemblance to human workmanship being heightened
by the numerous joints which, intersecting each
other along the face of a dike, remind us of well-fitted
masonry.
Forms of Dikes.—A dike is essentially a casting.
Melted rock is forced up from the heated interior into
a cavity or crack in the earth’s crust, cools and solidifies
there, and, like a metallic casting, assumes the
form of the fissure or mould. In other words, the
form of the dike is exactly that of the fissure into
which the lava was injected. Now the forms of fissures
depend partly upon the nature of the force that
produces them, but very largely upon the structure—and
especially the joint-structure—of the enclosing
rocks. Nearly all rocks are traversed by planes
of division or cracks called joints, which usually run
in several directions, dividing the rock into blocks.
And it is probable that dike-fissures are most commonly
.pn +1 // 148.png
produced, not by breaking the rocks anew, but
by widening or opening the pre-existing joint-cracks.
Hence the straight and regular jointing of slate, limestone
and most sedimentary rocks is accompanied by
wall-like dikes—the typical dikes (#Fig. 10:fig_10#); while
the more irregular jointing of granite and other massive
rocks gives rise to sinuous, branching, variable
dikes. The general dependence of dikes upon the
joint-structure of the rocks is proved by the facts that
dikes, like joints, are
normally vertical or
highly inclined, and
that they are usually
parallel with the principal
systems of joints
in the same district.
The wall-like dikes also
give off branches, but
usually in a regular manner, as shown in #Fig. 12:fig_12#.
.pm hi fig_12 310px "Fig. 12.—Dike with regular branches."
Structure of Dikes.—The rock traversed by a
dike is called the country or wall rock. Fragments
of this are often torn off by the igneous material, and
become enclosed in the latter. Such enclosed fragments
may sometimes form the main part of the dike,
which then, since they are necessarily angular, often
assumes the aspect of a breccia. This is the only important
exception to the rule that dikes are homogeneous
in composition; i.e., in the same dike we can
usually find—from end to end, from side to side, and
probably from top to bottom—no essential difference
in composition. But there is often a marked contrast
in texture between different parts of a dike, and especially
.pn +1 // 149.png
between the sides and central portion. The
liquid rock loses heat most rapidly where it is in contact
with the cold walls of the fissure, and solidifies
before it has time to crystallize, remaining compact
and sometimes even glassy; while in the middle of
the dike, unless it is very narrow, it cools so slowly as
to develop a distinctly crystalline texture. There is
no abrupt change in texture, but a gradual passage
from the compact border to the coarsely crystalline or
porphyritic middle portion. It is obvious that a similar
gradation in texture must exist between the top
and bottom of a dike.
Contact Phenomena.—Under this head are grouped
the interesting and important phenomena observable
along the contact between the dike and wall-rock.
These throw light upon the conditions of formation of
dikes, and are often depended upon to show whether
a rock mass is a dike or not. The student will observe
here:—
1. The detailed form of the contact. It may be
straight and simple, or exceedingly irregular, the dike
penetrating the wall, and enclosing fragments of it, as
in #Fig. 11:fig_11#, which is a typically igneous contact.
2. The alteration of the wall-rock by heat. This
may consist in: (a) coloration, shales and sandstones
being reddened in the same way as when clay is burnt
for bricks; (b) baking and induration, sandstone
being converted into quartzite and even jasper; clay,
slate, etc., being not only baked to a flinty hardness,
but actually vitrified, as in porcelainite; and bituminous
coal being converted into natural coke or anthracite;
and (c) crystallization, chalk, and other limestones
.pn +1 // 150.png
being changed to marble, and crystals of pyrite,
calcite, quartz, etc., being developed in slate, sandstone,
and other rocks.
3. The alteration of the dike-rock by (a) more
rapid cooling, and (b) the access of thermal waters.
The alteration of the wall-rock may extend only a
few inches or many yards from the dike, gradually
diminishing with the distance; and the cases are surprisingly
numerous where there is no perceptible alteration;
and, again, the alteration is usually mutual, the
dike-rock being altered in texture, color, and composition.
.pm hi fig_13 255px "Fig. 13.—Ideal cross-section of a laccolite."
.pm hi fig_14 255px "Fig. 14.—Ideal cross-section of a volcano."
Intrusive Beds.—We commonly think of dikes
as cutting across the strata, but they often lie in planes
parallel with them; and the same dike may run across
the beds in some parts of its course and between them
in others (#Fig. 12:fig_12#), or the conformable dike maybe
simply a lateral branch of a main vertical dike, as
shown in the same figure. All dikes or portions of
dikes lying conformably between the strata are called
intrusive beds or sheets.
When a dike fails to reach the surface, but spreads
out horizontally between the strata, forming a thick
dome or oven-shaped intrusive bed, the latter is called
.pn +1 // 151.png
a laccolite (#Fig. 13:fig_13#). Laccolites are sometimes of
immense volume, containing several cubic miles of
rock. #Fig. 14:fig_14# enables us to compare the laccolite
with the volcano.
In the one case a large mound of eruptive material
accumulates between the strata, the overlying beds
being lifted into a dome; while in the other case the
fissure or vent reaches the surface, and the mound of
lava is built up on top of the ground.
Cotemporaneous Beds.—When the lava emitted
by a crater is sufficiently liquid, it spreads out horizontally,
forming a volcanic sheet or bed. If such an
eruption is submarine, or the lava flow is subsequently
covered by the sea, sedimentary deposits are formed
over it; and beds of lava which thus come to lie conformably
between sedimentary strata are known as
cotemporaneous sheets or beds, because they belong,
in order of time, in the position in which we find
them, being, like any member of a stratified series,
newer than the underlying and older than the overlying
strata. Cotemporaneous lava-flows are sometimes
repeated again and again in the same district,
and thus important formations are built up of alternating
igneous and aqueous deposits. Evidently, the
student who would read correctly the record of igneous
activity in the past must be able to distinguish
intrusive and cotemporaneous beds. The principal
points to be considered in making this distinction
are: (1) The intrusive bed is essentially a dike, dense
and more or less crystalline in texture, altering, and
often enclosing fragments of, both the underlying and
overlying strata, and frequently jogging across or penetrating
.pn +1 // 152.png
the sediments. (2) The cotemporaneous bed,
on the other hand, being essentially a lava-flow, is
much less dense and crystalline, being usually distinctly
scoriaceous or amygdaloidal, especially at the borders,
and the underlying strata alone showing heat action,
or occurring as enclosures in the lava; for the overlying
strata are newer than the lava, and often consist
largely, at the base, of water-worn fragments of the lava.
Ages of Dikes.—The ages of dikes may be estimated
in several ways. They are necessarily newer
than any stratified formation which they intersect or
of which they enclose fragments; but any formation
crossing the top of a dike must usually be regarded as
newer than the dike, especially if it contains water-worn
fragments of the dike rock.
The relative ages of different dikes are determined
by their relations to the stratified formations; and still
more easily by their mutual intersections, on the principle
that when two dikes cross each other, the intersecting
must be newer than the intersected dike. It
is sometimes possible, in this way, to prove several
distinct periods of eruption in the same limited district.
The textures of dikes also often afford reliable
indications of their ages; for, as we have already seen,
the upper part of a dike, cooling rapidly and under
little pressure, must be less dense and crystalline than
the deep-seated portion, which cools slowly and under
great pressure.
Now, the lower, coarsely crystalline part of a dike
can usually be exposed on the surface only as the
result of enormous erosion; and erosion is a slow
process, requiring vast periods of time. Hence, when
.pn +1 // 153.png
we see a coarse-grained dike outcropping on the surface,
we are justified in regarding it as very old, for
all the fine-grained upper part has been gradually worn
away by the action of the rain, frost, etc. Other things
being equal, coarse-grained must be older than fine-grained
dikes; and the texture of a dike is at once a
measure of its age and of the amount of erosion which
the region has suffered since it was formed.
Eruptive Masses.—In striking contrast with the
more or less wall-like dikes are the highly irregular,
and even ragged, outlines of the eruptive masses; and
it is worth while to notice the probable cause of this
contrast. The true dikes are formed, for the most
part, of comparatively fine-grained rocks—the typical
“traps”; while the eruptive masses consist chiefly of
the coarse-grained or granitic varieties. Now we have
just seen that the coarse-grained rocks have been
formed at great depths in the earth’s crust, while the
fine-grained are comparatively superficial. But we
have good reason for believing that the joint-structure,
upon which the forms of dikes so largely depend,
is not well developed at great depths, where
the rocks are toughened, if not softened, by the high
temperature. In other words, trap dikes are formed
in the jointed formations, which break regularly; while
the granitic masses are formed where the absence of
joint-structure and a high temperature combine to
cause extremely irregular rifts and cavities when the
crust is broken.
Volcanic Pipes or Necks.—Every volcano and
every lava-flow or volcanic sheet must be connected
with the earth’s interior by a channel or fissure, which
.pn +1 // 154.png
becomes a dike when the lava ceases to flow. But
the converse proposition is not true, for it is probable
that many dikes did not originally reach the surface,
but have been exposed by subsequent denudation.
This is conspicuously the case with laccolites and
other forms of intrusive sheets. Volcanic sheets or
beds have probably often resulted from the overflow
of the lava at all points of an extensive fissure or system
of fissures; but the vent of the true volcano must
be more circumscribed, an approximately circular opening
in the earth’s crust, although doubtless originating
in a fissure or at the intersection of two or more fissures,
the lava continuing to flow at the widest part of
the wound in the crust long after it has congealed in
the narrower parts. Such a tube is known as the neck
or pipe of the volcano; and volcanic necks are a
highly interesting class of dikes, since they determine
the exact location of many an ancient volcano, where
the volcanic pile itself has long since been swept away.
Necks and dikes are the downward prolongations or
roots of the volcanic cone or sheet, and cannot be
exposed on the surface until the volcanic fires have
gone out and the agents of erosion have removed the
greater part of the ejected materials.
Hence, equally with the dikes which originally failed
to reach the surface, they, wherever open to our observation,
testify to extensive erosion and a vast antiquity.
.sp 2
.h5
Original Structures of Vein Rocks.
Many things called veins are improperly so called,
such as dikes of granite and trap, and beds of coal
and iron-ore. The smaller, more irregular, branching
.pn +1 // 155.png
dikes, especially, are very commonly called veins, and
to distinguish the true veins from these eruptive masses,
they are designated as mineral veins or lodes, although
the term lode is usually restricted to the metalliferous
veins.
Origin of Veins.—Various theories of the formation
of veins have been proposed, but the most of
these are of historic interest merely, for geologists are
now well agreed that nearly all true veins have been
formed by the deposition of minerals from solution in
fissures or cavities in the earth’s crust. In many cases,
especially where the veins are of limited extent, it
seems probable that a part or all of the mineral matter
was derived from the immediately enclosing rocks,
being dissolved out by percolating water; and these
are known as segregation or lateral secretion veins.
But it is quite certain that as a general rule the mineral
solutions have come chiefly from below, the deep-seated
thermal waters welling up through any channel
opened to them, and gradually depositing the dissolved
minerals on the walls of the fissure as the temperature
and pressure are diminished. This case,
however, differs from the first only in deriving the
vein-forming minerals from more remote and deeper
portions of the enclosing rocks; and thus we see that
vein-formation, whether on a large or a small scale, is
always essentially a process of segregation.
We know that every volcano and every lava flow
must be connected below the surface with a dike; and
it is almost equally certain that the waters of mineral
springs forming tufaceous mineral deposits on the surface,
as in the geyser districts, also deposit a portion
.pn +1 // 156.png
of the dissolved minerals on the walls of the subterranean
channels, which are thus being gradually filled
up and converted into mineral veins, which will be
exposed on the surface when erosion has removed the
tufaceous overflow. This connection of vein-formation
with the superficial deposits of existing springs
has been clearly proved in several important instances
in Nevada and California.
Veins occur chiefly in old, metamorphic, and highly
disturbed formations, where there is abundant evidence
of the former existence of profound fissures, and in
regions similar to those in which thermal springs occur
to-day.
In the supplement to the lithological section the
student will find the formation of a typical vein briefly
described and contrasted with that of a typical dike;
also a brief account of the lithological peculiarities of
vein rocks, and general statements concerning their
relative abundance and vast economic importance.
External Characteristics of Veins.—The typical
vein may be described as a fissure of indefinite length
and depth, filled with mineral substances deposited
from solution. Externally, it is very similar to the
typical dike, for the fissures are made in the same
way for both. Veins are normally highly inclined to
the horizon; they exhibit in nearly every respect the
same general relations to the structure of the country
rock as dikes; and the ages of veins are determined
in the same way as the ages of dikes.
The extensive mining operations to which veins
have been subjected in all parts of the world, have
made our knowledge of their forms below the surface
.pn +1 // 157.png
very full and accurate. It has been learned in this
way that very often the corresponding portions of the
walls of a vein do not coincide in position, but one
side is higher or lower than the other, showing that
the walls slipped over each other when the fissure was
formed or subsequently; and this faulting or displacement
of the walls appears to be much more common
with veins than with dikes, perhaps because the fissures
remained open much longer. This slipping of
the walls is the principal cause of the almost constant
changes in the width of veins. For, since the walls
are never true planes, and are often highly irregular
any unequal movements must bring them nearer together
at some points than at others. As a rule, the
enormous friction accompanying the faulting, either
crushes the wall-rock, or polishes and striates it, producing
the highly characteristic surfaces known as
slicken-sides. Where the wall is finely pulverized in
this way, or is partially decomposed before or after
the filling of the fissure, a thin layer of soft, argillaceous
material is formed, separating the vein proper from
the wall-rock. The miners call this the selvage; and
it is a very characteristic feature of the true fissure
veins.
Fragments of the wall-rock are frequently enclosed
in veins, and the latter sometimes branch or divide in
such a way as to surround a large mass of the wall,
which is known as a “horse.” A similar result is
accomplished when a fissure is re-opened after being
filled, if the new fissure does not coincide exactly with
the old. It has been proved that veins have thus been
re-opened and filled several times in succession; and
.pn +1 // 158.png
in this way fragments of the older vein material become
enclosed in the newer.
Although usually determined in direction by the
joint-structure of the country rock, veins are often
parallel with the bedding, especially in highly inclined,
schistose formations. Such interbedded veins are commonly
distinctly lenticular in form, occupying rifts in
the strata which thin out in all directions and are often
very limited in extent.
Whether conforming with the joint-structure or bedding,
veins are commonly arranged in systems by their
parallelism, those of different systems or directions
usually differing in age and composition, and the older
veins being generally faulted or displaced when intersected
by the newer.
Internal Characteristics of Veins.—Internally,
veins and dikes are strongly contrasted; and it is upon
the internal features, chiefly, as previously explained,
that we must depend for their distinction. In metalliferous
veins the minerals containing the metal
sought for (the galenite, sphalerite, etc.) are the ore;
while the non-metalliferous minerals (the quartz, feldspar,
calcite, etc.) are called the gangue or vein-stone
proper. Although the combinations of minerals in
veins are almost endless, yet certain associations of
ores with each other and with different gangue minerals
are tolerably constant, and constitute an important
subject for the student of metallurgy and
mining.
When a vein is composed of a single mineral, as
quartz, it may rival a dike in its homogeneity. Most
important veins, however, are composed of several or a
.pn +1 // 159.png
large number of minerals, which may be sometimes
more or less uniformly mixed with each other, but are
usually distributed in the fissure in a very irregular
manner. The great granite veins which are worked
for mica, feldspar and quartz, are good illustrations,
on a large scale, of the structure of veins in which several
minerals have been deposited cotemporaneously.
The individual minerals are found to a large extent,
in great, irregular masses, with no order observable in
their arrangement.
When a mineral is deposited from solution, it crystallizes
by preference on a surface of similar composition,
thus quartz on quartz, feldspar on feldspar, and
so on; and it seems probable that this selective action
of the wall-rock may be a principal cause of the irregular
distribution of minerals in veins. It has often
been observed in metalliferous veins that the richness
varies with the nature of the adjacent country rock.
This dependence of the contents of a fissure upon the
wall-rock may be due in part to the selective deposition
of the minerals, and in part to their derivation
from the contiguous portions of the country or wall-rock,
as in the so-called segregated veins. Temperature
and pressure exert an important influence upon
chemical precipitation, and it is, therefore, probable
that the composition of many veins varies with the
depth.
.pm hi fig_15 258px "Fig. 15.—Ideal section of a vein."
Frequently, perhaps usually, the minerals of composite
veins are deposited in succession, instead of cotemporaneously,
giving rise to the remarkable banded
structure so characteristic of this class of veins. The
first mineral deposited in the fissure forms a layer
.pn +1 // 160.png
covering each wall, and is in turn covered by layers of
the second mineral, and that by the third, and so on,
until the fissure is filled, or the solution exhausted.
The distinguishing features of this structure are shown
in #Fig. 15:fig_15#, in which w w represents the wall-rock, a a,
b b, c c are successive layers of quartz, fluorite and
barite, and the central band, d, is galenite. Since the
vein grows from the outside inward, the outer layers
are the oldest, and the central layers are the newest;
again, the layers are symmetrically arranged, being
repeated in the reverse
order on opposite sides
of the middle of the vein;
and, lastly, in layers composed
of prismatic crystals,
as quartz (see the
figure); the crystals are
perpendicular to the wall
and often project into,
and even through, the
succeeding layers. Such
a crystalline layer is called a “comb” and the interlocking
of the layers in this way is described as the
comb-structure of the vein. The banding of veins is
thus strongly contrasted with stratification, and with
the structure in dikes due to the more rapid cooling
along the walls. The duplicate layers are often discontinuous
and of unequal thickness, on account of
the strong tendency to segregation in the materials.
This is clearly shown in #Fig. 16:fig_16#, drawn on a reduced
scale from a polished section of a lead vein in Cumberland,
England, contained in the Museum of the
.pn +1 // 161.png
Boston Society of Natural History. In this the gangue
minerals are fluorite (f) and barite (b). The central
band (f g) is a darker fluorite containing irregular
masses of galenite. The banded structure of veins
is exactly reproduced in miniature in the banding
of agates, geodes, and the amygdules formed in old
lavas. Unfilled cavities frequently remain along the
middle of the vein. When small, these are known
as “pockets.” They are commonly lined with crystals;
and when the latter are minute, the pockets are
called druses. In metalliferous veins, the ore is much
more abundant in some parts than in others, and these
ore-bodies, especially when somewhat definite in outline,
are known in their different forms and in different
localities, as courses, slants, shoots, chimneys, and
bonanzas of ore. The intersections and junctions of
veins are often among the richest parts, as if the meeting
of dissimilar solutions had determined the precipitation
of the ore.
.pm hi fig_16 413px "Fig. 16.—Section of a lead vein, one-fifth natural size."
.pn +1 // 162.png
Metalliferous veins, especially, are usually deeply
decomposed along the outcrop by the action of atmospheric
agencies. The ore is oxidized, and to a
large extent removed by solution, leaving the quartz
and other gangue minerals in a porous state, stained
by oxides of iron, copper, and other metals, forming
the gossan or blossom-rock of the vein.
Peculiar Types of Veins.—In calcareous or
limestone formations, especially, the joint-cracks and
bedding-cracks are often widened through the solution
of the rock by infiltrating water, and thus become
the channels of a more or less extensive subterranean
drainage, by which they are more rapidly enlarged to
a system of galleries and chambers, and, in some cases,
large limestone caverns. The water dripping into the
cavern from the overlying limestone is highly charged
with carbonate of lime, which is largely deposited on
the ceiling and floor of the cavern, forming stalactitic
and stalagmitic deposits. These are masses of mineral
matter deposited from solution in cavities in the
earth’s crust, and are essentially vein-formations.
Portions of caverns deserted by the flowing streams by
which they were excavated, are often filled up in this
way, being converted into irregular veins of calcite.
But calcite is not the only mineral found in these
cavern deposits, for barite and fluorite, and various
lead and zinc ores, especially the sulphides of these
metals—galenite and sphalerite—have also been
leached out of the surrounding limestone and concentrated
in the caverns. The celebrated lead mines of
the Mississippi Valley, and some of the richest silver-lead
mines of Utah and Nevada are of this character.
.pn +1 // 163.png
The forms of these cavern-deposits vary almost indefinitely,
and are often highly irregular. The principal
types are known as gash-veins, flats and sheets (#Fig. 17:fig_17#),
chambers and pockets.
Where joints and other cracks have opened slightly
in different directions and become filled with infiltrated
ores, we have what the German miners call a stock-work,—an
irregular network of small and interlacing
veins.
.pm hi fig_17 420px "Fig. 17.—Gash-veins and sheets."
An impregnation is an irregular segregation of metalliferous
minerals in the mass of some eruptive or
crystalline rock. Its outlines are not sharply defined,
but it shades off gradually into the enclosing rock.
Fahlbands are similar ill-defined deposits or segregations
in stratified rocks. An impregnation or vein
occurring along the contact between two dissimilar
rocks is called a contact deposit. These are usually
found between formations of different geological ages,
and especially between eruptive and sedimentary
rocks.
.pn +1 // 164.png
.sp 2
.h5
Subsequent Structures produced by Subterranean Agencies.
The subterranean forces concerned in the formation
of rocks are chiefly various manifestations of that
enormous tangential pressure developed in the earth’s
crust, partly by the cooling and shrinkage of its
interior, but largely, it is probable, by the diminution
of the velocity of the earth’s rotation by tidal friction,
and the consequent diminution of the oblateness of its
form. It is well known that the centrifugal force arising
from the earth’s rotation is sufficient to change the
otherwise spherical form of the earth to an oblate
spheroid, with a difference of twenty-six miles between
the equatorial and polar diameters. It is also well
known that while the earth turns from west to east on
its axis, the tidal wave moves around the globe from
east to west, thus acting like a powerful friction-brake
to stop the earth’s rotation. Our day is consequently
lengthening, and the earth’s form as gradually approaching
the perfect sphere. This means a very decided
shortening and consequent crumpling of the equatorial
circumference, and is equivalent to a marked shrinkage
of the earth’s interior, so far as the equatorial
regions are concerned.
The most important and direct result of the horizontal
thrust, whether due to cooling or tidal friction,
is the corrugation or wrinkling of the crust; and the
earth-wrinkles are of three orders of magnitude,—continents,
mountain-ranges, and rock-folds or arches.
Continents and ocean-basins, although the most
important and permanent structural features of the
.pn +1 // 165.png
earth’s crust, do not demand further consideration
here, since their forms and relations are adequately
described in the better text-books of physical geography.
The forms and distribution of mountain-ranges
might be dismissed in the same way; but, unlike continents,
the structure of mountains, upon which their
reliefs mainly depend, is quite fully exposed to our
observation, and is one of the most important fields of
the student of structural geology. Mountains, however,
as previously explained, combine nearly all the
kinds of structure produced by the subterranean agencies,
and their consideration, therefore, belongs at the
end rather than the beginning of this section.
Inclined or Folded Strata.—Normally, strata
are horizontal, and dikes and veins are vertical or
nearly so. Hence the stratified rocks are more exposed
to the crumpling action of the tangential pressure
in the earth’s crust than the eruptive and vein
rocks; and it is for this reason and partly because the
stratified rocks are vastly more abundant than the
other kinds, that the effects of the corrugation of the
crust are studied chiefly in the former. But it should
be understood that folded dikes and veins are not
uncommon.
That the stratified rocks have, in many instances,
suffered great disturbance subsequent to their deposition,
is very evident; for, while the strata must have
been originally approximately straight and horizontal,
they are now often curved, or sharply bent and contorted,
and highly inclined or even vertical. All inclined
beds or strata are portions of great folds or
arches. Thus we may feel sure when we see a stratum
.pn +1 // 166.png
sloping downward into the ground, that its inclination
or dip does not continue at the same angle, but that
at some moderate depth it gradually changes and the
bed rises to the surface again. Similarly, if we look in
the opposite direction and think of the bed as sloping
upward—we know that the surface of the ground is being
constantly lowered by erosion, and consequently that
the inclined stratum formerly extended higher than it
does now, but not indefinitely higher; for, in imagination,
we see it curving and descending to the level of
the present surface again. Hence it forms, at the
same time, part of one side of a great concave arch,
and of a great convex arch, just as every inclined surface
on the ground indicates both a hill and a valley.
And guided by this principle we can often reconstruct
with much probability folds that have been more or
less completely swept away by erosion, or that are
buried beyond our sight in the earth’s crust.
The arches of the strata are rarely distinctly indicated
in the topography, but must be studied where
the ground has been partly dissected, as in cliffs,
gorges, quarries, etc. They are also, as a rule, far
more irregular and complex than they are usually conceived
or represented. The wrinkles of our clothing
are often better illustrations of rock-folds than the
models and diagrams used for that purpose. This
becomes self-evident when we reflect that the earth’s
crust is exceedingly heterogeneous in composition and
structure, and must, therefore, yield unequally to the
unequal strains imposed upon it.
The folds or undulations of the strata may be profitably
compared with water-waves. In fact, the comparison
.pn +1 // 167.png
is so close that they have been not inaptly
called rock-waves. Folds, like waves, unless very
large, rarely continue for any great distance, but die
out and are replaced by others, giving rise to the en
echelon or step-like arrangement. The plan of both
a wave and a fold is a more or less elongated ellipse,
each stratum in a fold being semi-ellipsoidal or boat-shaped.
In other words, a normal fold is an elongated
mound of concentric strata, being highest at the centre,
sloping very gradually toward the ends, and much
more abruptly toward the sides.
.pm hi fig_18 600px "Fig. 18.—Anticlinal and synclinal folds."
The imaginary line passing longitudinally through a
fold, about which the strata appear to be bent, is the
axis; and the plane lying midway between the two
sides of a fold and including the axis is the axial
plane. The two principal kinds of folds are the anticline
(#Fig. 18:fig_18#, A), where the strata dip away from the
axis; and the syncline (#Fig. 18:fig_18#, B), where they dip
toward the axis. They are commonly, but not always,
correlative, like hill and valley.
Rock-folds are of all sizes, from almost microscopic
.pn +1 // 168.png
wrinkles to great arches miles in length and breadth,
and thousands of feet in height. The smaller folds,
or such as may be seen in hand specimens and even
in considerable blocks of stone, are commonly called
contortions, and it is interesting to observe that they
are, in nearly everything except size, precisely like the
large folds, so that they answer admirably as geological
models. Large folds, however, are almost necessarily
curves, but contortions are frequently angular (#Fig. 19:fig_19#).
With folds, as with waves, the small undulations
are borne upon the large ones; but the contortions
are not uniformly distributed. An inspection of #Fig. 18:fig_18#
shows that when the rocks are folded they must be
in a state of tension on the anticlines (A), and in a
state of compression in the synclines (B), and the
latter is evidently the normal position of the puckerings
or contortions of the strata, as shown in #Fig. 20:fig_20#.
Contortions are also most commonly found in thin-bedded,
flexible rocks, such as shales and schists.
And when we find them in hard, rigid rocks, like
gneiss and limestone, it must mean either that the
structure was developed with extreme slowness, or
that the rock was more flexible then and possibly
plastic.
.pm hi fig_19 600px "Fig. 19.—Contorted strata."
.pm hi fig_20 501px "Fig. 20.—Contorted syncline."
.pm hi fig_21 385px "Fig. 21.—Section of anticlinal mountains."
It is very interesting to notice the relations of anticlinal
.pn +1 // 169.png
and synclinal folds to the agents of erosion. At
the time the folds are made, the anticlinals, of course,
are ridges, and the synclinals, valleys, and this relation
sometimes continues, as shown in #Fig. 21:fig_21#; but we
have seen that the rocks in the trough of the synclinal
are compressed and compacted, i.e., made more capable
of resisting erosion, while those on the crest of the
anticlinal are stretched and broken, i.e., made more
susceptible of erosion. The consequence is that the
anticlinals are usually worn away very much faster
.pn +1 // 170.png
than the synclinals; so much faster that in many cases
the topographic features are completely transposed,
and in place of anticlinal ridges and synclinal valleys
(#Fig. 21:fig_21#) we find synclinal ridges and anticlinal valleys
(#Fig. 22:fig_22#).
.pm hi fig_22 550px "Fig. 22.—Section of synclinal mountains."
.pm hi fig_23 355px "Fig. 23.—Monoclinal fold."
.pm hi fig_24 520px "Fig. 24.—Unsymmetrical and inverted folds."
Besides the anticlinal and synclinal folds already
explained, there are folds that slope in only one direction,
one-sided or monoclinal folds (#Fig. 23:fig_23#). Anticlinal
and synclinal folds are symmetrical when the dip
or slope of the strata is the same on both sides and
the axial plane is vertical. The great majority of
.pn +1 // 171.png
folds, however, are unsymmetrical, the opposite slopes
being unequal, and the axial planes inclined to the
vertical (#Fig. 24:fig_24#, A). This means that the compressing
or plicating force has been greater from one side
than from the other, as indicated by the arrows. It
acted with the greatest intensity on the side of the
gentler slope, the tendency evidently having been to
crowd or tip the fold over in the direction of the steep
slope. When the steep slope approaches the vertical,
this tendency is almost unresisted, and when it passes
the vertical, gravitation assists in overturning the fold
(#Fig. 24:fig_24#, B). Such highly unsymmetrical folds, including
all cases where the two sides of the fold slope
in the same direction, are described as overturned or
inverted, although the latter term is not strictly applicable
to the entire fold, but only to the strata composing
the under or lee side of it. #Fig. 24:fig_24#, B, shows that
these beds are completely inverted, the older, as the
figures indicate, lying conformably upon the newer.
This inversion is one of the most important features
of folded strata, and it has led to many mistakes in
determining their order of succession. In the great
mountain-chains, especially, it is exhibited on the
grandest scale, great groups of strata being folded
over and over each other as we might fold carpets.
.pn +1 // 172.png
An inverted stratum is like a flattened S or Z, and may
be pierced by a vertical shaft three times, as has
actually happened in some coal mines. Folds are
open when the sides are not parallel, and closed when
they are parallel, the former being represented by a
half-open, and the latter by a closed, book. Closed
folds are usually inverted, and when the tops have
been removed by erosion (#Fig. 25:fig_25#), the repetition of
the strata may escape detection, and the thickness of
the section be, in consequence, greatly overestimated.
Thus, a geologist traversing the section in #Fig. 25:fig_25#
would see thirty-two strata, all inclined to the left at
the same angle, those on the right apparently passing
below those on the left, and all forming part of one
great fold. The repetition of the strata in reverse
order, as indicated by the numbers, and the structure
below the surface, show, however, that the section
really consists of only four beds involved in a series of
four closed folds, the true thickness of the beds in this
section being only one-eighth as great as the apparent
thickness.
.pm hi fig_25 575px "Fig. 25.—Series of closed folds."
The most important features to be noted in observing
and describing inclined or folded strata are the
strike and dip. The strike is the compass bearing or
.pn +1 // 173.png
horizontal direction of the strata. It is the direction
of the outcrop of the strata where the ground is level.
It may also be defined as the direction of a level line
on the surface of a stratum, and is usually parallel with
the axis of the fold.
.pm hi fig_26 420px "Fig. 26.—Dip and strike."
The dip is the inclination of the beds to the plane
of the horizon, and embraces two elements: (a) the
direction of the dip, which is always at right angles to
the strike, being the line of steepest descent on the
surface of the stratum, and (b) the amount of the
dip, which is the value of the angle between the line
of steepest descent and the horizon.
In #Fig. 26:fig_26#, s t is the direction of the strike, and d p
that of the dip. The strike and direction of the dip
are determined with the compass, and the amount of
the dip with the clinometer, an instrument for measuring
vertical angles.
The strike is much less variable than the dip, being
often essentially constant over extensive districts;
while the dip, except in very large or closed folds, is
constantly changing in direction and amount.
When the dip and surface breadth of a series of
strata have been measured, it is a simple problem in
.pn +1 // 174.png
trigonometry to determine the true thickness, and the
depth below the surface of any particular stratum at
any given distance from its outcrop. When the strata
are vertical, the surface breadth or traverse measure
is equal to the thickness.
By the outcrop of a stratum or formation we ordinarily
understand its actual exposure on the surface,
where it projects through the soil in ledges or quarries.
But the term is also more broadly defined to mean the
exposure of the stratum as it would appear if the soil
were entirely removed. It is instructive to observe
the relations of the outcrop to the form of the surface.
Its breadth varies with its inclination to the surface,
appearing narrow and showing its true thickness where
it is perpendicular to the surface, and broadening out
rapidly where the surface cuts it obliquely. The outcrops
of horizontal strata form level lines or bands
along the sides of hills and valleys, essentially contour
lines in the topography; and appear as irregular, sinuous
bands bordering the streams and valleys in the
map-view of the country. The outcrops of vertical
strata, dikes, or veins, on the other hand, are represented
by straight lines and bands on the map. While
the outcrops of inclined strata are deflected to the
right or left in crossing ridges and valleys, according
to the direction and amount of their inclination.
A geological map shows the surface distribution of
the rocks, i.e., gives in one view the forms and arrangement
of the outcrops of all the rocks in the district
mapped, including the trend or strike of the folded
strata. The map may be lithological, each kind of
rock, as granite, sandstone, limestone, etc., being represented
.pn +1 // 175.png
by a different color; or, it may be historical,
each color representing one geological formation, i.e.,
the rocks formed during one period of geological time,
without reference to their lithological character. But
in the best maps these two methods are combined.
The geological section shows the arrangement of the
rocks below the surface, revealing the dip of the strata
and supplementing the map, both modes of representation,
the horizontal and vertical, being required to
give a complete idea of the geological structure of a
country. For a detailed and satisfactory explanation
of the construction and use of geological maps and
sections, students are referred to Prof. Geikie’s “Outlines
of Field Geology.”
Cleavage Structure.—This important structure
is now known to be, like rock-folds, a direct result of
the great horizontal pressure in the earth’s crust. It
is entirely distinct in its nature and origin from crystalline
cleavage, and may properly be called lithologic
cleavage. It is also essentially unlike stratification and
joint-structure. It agrees with stratification in dividing
the rocks into thin parallel layers, but the cleavage
planes are normally vertical instead of horizontal. And
the cleavage planes differ from joints in running in
only one direction, dividing the rock into layers;
while joints, as we shall see, traverse the same mass of
rock in various directions, dividing it into blocks.
.pm hi fig_27 430px "Fig. 27.—Slaty cleavage in contorted strata."
The principal characteristics of lithologic cleavage
are: (1) It is rare, except in fine-grained, soft rocks,
having its best development in the slates, roofing slates
and school slates affording typical examples. Hence
it is commonly known as slaty cleavage. (2) The
.pn +1 // 176.png
cleavage planes are highly inclined or vertical, very
constant in dip and strike, and quite independent of
stratification. (3) It is usually associated with folded
strata, and often with distorted nodules or fossils. The
more important of these characteristics are illustrated by
#Fig. 27:fig_27#. This
represents a
block of contorted
strata
in which the
dark layers
are slate with
very perfect
cleavage parallel
to the
left-hand
shaded side
of the block;
while the
white layers
are sandstone
and quite
destitute of
cleavage.
Many explanations
of
this interesting structure have been proposed, but that
first advanced by Sharpe may be regarded as fully
established. He said that slaty cleavage is always
due to powerful pressure at right angles to the planes
of cleavage. All the characteristics of cleavage noted
above are in harmony with this theory. Cleavage is
.pn +1 // 177.png
limited to fine-grained or soft rocks, because these
alone can be modified internally by pressure, without
rupture. Harder and more rigid rocks may be bent
or broken, but they appear insusceptible of minute
wrinkling or other change of structure affecting every
particle of the mass. Since the cleavage planes are
normally vertical, the pressure, according to the theory,
must be horizontal. That this horizontal pressure
exists and is adequate in direction and amount, is
proved by the folds and contortions of the cleaved
strata; for, as shown in #Fig. 27:fig_27#, the cleavage planes
coincide with the strike of the foldings, and are thus
perpendicular to the pressure horizontally as well as
vertically. The distortion of the fossils in cleaved
slates is plainly due to pressure at right angles to the
cleavage, for they are compressed or shortened in that
direction, and extended or flattened out in the planes
of cleavage. Again, Tyndall has shown that the magnetism
of cleaved slate proves that it has been powerfully
compressed perpendicularly to the cleavage. And,
finally, repeated experiments by Sorby and others have
proved that a very perfect cleavage may be developed
in clay (unconsolidated slate) by compression, the
planes of cleavage being at right angles to the line of
pressure. When, however, Sharpe’s theory had been
thus fully demonstrated, the question as to how pressure
produces cleavage still remained unanswered.
Sorby held that clay contains foreign particles with
unequal axes, such as mica-scales, etc., and that these
are turned by the pressure so as to lie in parallel
planes perpendicular to its line of action, thus producing
easy splitting or cleavage in those planes. And
.pn +1 // 178.png
he proved by experiments that a mixture of clay and
mica-scales does behave in this way. But Tyndall
showed that the cleavage is more perfect just in proportion
as the clay is free from foreign particles, and
in such a perfectly homogeneous substance as beeswax,
he developed a more perfect cleavage than is possible
in clay. His theory, which is now universally accepted,
is, that the clay itself is composed of grains which are
flattened by pressure, the granular structure with
irregular fracture in all directions, changing to a scaly
structure with very easy and plane fracture or splitting
in one definite direction.
Observations on distorted fossils and nodules have
shown that when slaty cleavage is developed, the rock
is, on the average, reduced in the direction of the
pressure to two-fifths of its original extent, and correspondingly
extended in the vertical direction. Thus,
whether rocks yield to the horizontal pressure in the
earth’s crust, by folding and corrugation, or by the
flattening of their constituent particles, they are alike
shortened horizontally and extended vertically; and it
is impossible to overestimate the importance of these
facts in the formation of mountains.
Faults or Displacements.—We may readily conceive
that the forces which were adequate to elevate,
corrugate, and even crush vast masses of solid rock
were also sufficient to crack and break them; and
since the fractures indicate that the strains have been
applied unequally, it will be seen that unequal movements
of the parts must often result. If this unequal
movement takes place, i.e., if the rocks on opposite
sides of a fracture of the earth’s crust do not move
.pn +1 // 179.png
together, but slip over each other, a fault is produced.
The two sides may move in opposite directions, or in
the same direction but unequally, or one side may
remain stationary while the other moves up or down.
It is simply essential that the movement should be
unequal in direction, or amount, or both; that there
should be an actual slip, so that strata that were once
continuous no longer correspond in position, but lie
at different levels on opposite sides of the fracture.
The vertical difference in movement is known as the
throw, slip, or displacement of the fault. Fault-fractures
rarely approach the horizontal direction, but are
usually highly inclined or approximately vertical.
When the fault is inclined, as in #Fig. 28:fig_28#, the actual
slipping in the plane of the fault exceeds the vertical
throw, for the movement is then partly horizontal, the
beds being pulled apart endwise. The inclination of
faults, as of veins and dikes, should be measured from
the vertical and called the hade. Faults are sometimes
hundreds of miles in length; and the throw
may vary from a fraction of an inch to thousands of
feet.
.pm hi fig_28 286px "Fig. 28.—Section of a normal fault."
.pm hi fig_29 286px "Fig. 29.—Section of a reversed fault."
Transverse sections, such as are represented by
#Fig. 28:fig_28# and many specimens and models, do not give
.pn +1 // 180.png
the complete plan or idea of a fault; but this is seen
more perfectly in #Fig. 30:fig_30#. We learn from this that a
typical fault is a fracture along which the strata have
sagged or settled down unequally. The most important
point to be observed here is that the strata do
not drop bodily, but are merely bent, the throw being
greatest at the middle of the fault and gradually diminishing
toward the ends. In other words, every simple
fault must die out gradually; for we cannot conceive
of a fault as ending abruptly, except where it turns
upon itself so as to completely enclose a block of the
strata, which may drop down bodily; but the fault is
then really endless. A fault may be represented on
a map by a line; if a simple fault, by a single straight
line. But faults are often compound, and are represented
by branching lines; that is, the earth’s crust
has been broken irregularly, and the parts adjoining
the fracture have sagged or risen unequally.
.pm hi fig_30 333px "Fig. 30.—Ideal view of a complete fault."
The rock above an inclined fault, vein, or dike
(#Fig. 28:fig_28#) is called the hanging wall, and that below
the foot wall. Now inclined faults are divided into
two classes, according to the relative movements of
.pn +1 // 181.png
the two walls. Usually, the hanging wall slips down
and the foot wall slips up, as in #Fig. 28:fig_28#. Faults on
this plan are so nearly the universal rule that they are
called normal faults. They indicate that the strata
were in a state of tension, for their broken ends are
pulled apart horizontally, so that a vertical line may
cross the plane of a stratum without touching it.
A few important faults have been observed, however,
in which the foot-wall[**no hyphen before] has fallen and the hanging-wall[**]
has risen (#Fig. 29:fig_29#). These are known as reversed
faults; and they indicate that the strata were in a state
of lateral compression, the broken ends of the beds
having been pushed horizontally past each other, so
that a vertical line or shaft may intersect the same bed
twice, as has been actually demonstrated in the case
of some beds of coal.
.pm hi fig_31 570px "Fig. 31.—Explanation of normal faults."
The usual explanation of normal faults is given in
#Fig. 31:fig_31#. The inclined fractures of the earth’s crust
must often be converging, bounding, or enclosing large
V-shaped blocks (A, B). If now, through any cause,
as the folding of the strata, they are brought into a
.pn +1 // 182.png
state of tension, so that the fractures are widened, the
V-shaped masses, being unsupported, settle down, the
fractures bounding them becoming normal faults, as
is seen by tracing the bed X through the dislocations.
The single fracture below the block A is inclined, and
the stretching has been accomplished by slipping along
it and faulting the bed Z as well as X, the entire section
to the right of this fracture being part of a much larger
V-shaped block the right-hand boundary of which is
not seen. But the united fracture below the block B
being vertical, any horizontal movement must widen it
into a fissure, which is kept open by the great wedge
above and may become the seat of a dike or mineral
vein. The beds below the V may, in this case, escape
dislocation, as is seen by tracing the bed Z across the
fissure. These pairs of converging normal faults are
called trough faults; and this is the only way in which
we can conceive of important faults as terminating at
moderate depths below the surface, and not affecting
the entire thickness of the earth’s crust.
Important reversed faults are believed to occur
chiefly along the axes of overturned anticlines (#Fig. 24:fig_24#)
where the strata have been broken by the unequal
strains, and those on the upper side shoved bodily
over those on the lower or inverted side.
An extensive displacement of the strata is sometimes
accomplished by short slips along each of a series of
parallel fractures, producing a step fault.
Faults cutting inclined or folded strata are divided
into two classes, according as they are approximately
parallel with the direction of the dip or of the strike.
The first are known as transverse or dip faults, and
.pn +1 // 183.png
the second as longitudinal or strike faults. The chief
interest of either class consists in their effect upon the
outcrops of the faulted strata, after erosion has removed
the escarpment produced by the dislocation.
.pm hi fig_32 320px "Fig. 32.—Plan of a dip fault."
Dip faults cause a lateral shift or displacement of
the outcrops, as shown in #Fig. 32:fig_32#, which represents a
plan or map-view of the strata traversed by the fault
b b, the down throw being on the right and the up
throw on the left. The dip of the strata is indicated
by the small arrows and the accompanying figures;
and it will be observed on tracing the outcrop of any
stratum, a a, across the fault that it is shifted to the
right. If the throw of the fault were reversed, the
displacement of the outcrop would be reversed, also.
Strike faults are of two kinds, according as they incline
in the same direction as the strata, or in the contrary
direction. The effect of the first kind is to conceal
some of the beds, as shown in #Fig. 33:fig_33#, in which
beds 5 and 6 do not outcrop, but we pass on the surface
abruptly from 4 to 7. The apparent thickness of
the section is thus less than the real thickness. When
the fault inclines against the strata, on the other hand
.pn +1 // 184.png
(#Fig. 34:fig_34#), the outcrops of certain strata are repeated
on the surface; and a number of parallel faults of this
kind, a step fault, will, like a series of closed folds
(#Fig. 25:fig_25#), cause the apparent thickness of the section
to greatly exceed the real thickness. Repetition of the
strata by faulting is distinguished from repetition by
folding by being in the same instead of the reverse
order.
.pm hi fig_33 264px "Fig. 33.—Strike fault, concealing strata."
.pm hi fig_34 258px "Fig. 34.—Strike fault, repeating strata."
Folds and faults are really closely related. In the
former the strata are disturbed and displaced by bending;
in the latter by breaking and slipping; and the
displacement which is accomplished by a fold may
gradually change to a fracture and slip. This relation
is especially noticeable with monoclinal folds (#Fig. 23:fig_23#),
in which the tendency to shear or break the beds is
often very marked.
Important faults are rarely simple, well-defined fractures;
but, in consequence of the enormous friction,
the rocks are usually more or less broken and crushed,
sometimes for a breadth of many feet or yards. The
fragments of the various beds are then strung along
the fault in the direction of the slipping, and this circumstance
has been made use of in tracing the continuation
of faulted beds of coal. In other cases the
.pn +1 // 185.png
direction of the slip is plainly indicated by the bending
of the broken ends of the strata (#Fig. 35:fig_35#), and the
beds are sometimes turned up at a high angle or even
overturned in this way.
.pm hi fig_35 305px "Fig. 35.—Section of beds distorted by a fault."
Since faults are not plane, but undulating and often
highly irregular, fractures, the walls will not coincide
after slipping; and if the rocks are hard enough to
resist the enormous pressure, the cavities or fissures
produced in this way may remain open. Now faults
are continuous fractures of the earth’s crust, reaching
down to an unknown but very great depth; and hence
they afford the best outlets for the heated subterranean
waters; so that it is common to find an important
fault marked on the surface by a line of springs, and
these are often thermal. The warm mineral waters on
their way to the surface deposit part of the dissolved
minerals in the irregular fissures along the fault, which
are thus changed to mineral veins. This agrees with
the fact that the walls of veins usually show faulting
as well as crushed rock, slickensides, and other evidences
of slipping.
If the earth’s surface were not subject to erosion,
.pn +1 // 186.png
every fault would be marked on the surface by an
escarpment equal in height to the throw of the fault;
and, notwithstanding the powerful tendency of erosion
to obliterate them, these escarpments are sometimes
observed, although of diminished height. Thus, according
to Gilbert, the Zandia Mountains in New
Mexico are due to a fault of 11,000 feet, leaving an
escarpment still 7000 feet high. But, as a rule, there
is no escarpment or marked inequality of the surface,
the fault, like the fold, not being distinctly indicated
in the topography. In all such cases we must conclude
either that the faults were made a very long
time ago, or that they have been formed with extreme
slowness, so slowly that erosion has kept pace with the
displacement, the escarpments being worn away as
fast as formed. These and other considerations make
it quite certain that extensive displacements are not
produced suddenly, but either grow by a slow, creeping
motion, or by small slips many times repeated at
long intervals of time.
Joints and Joint-structure.—This is the most
universal of all rock-structures, since all hard rocks
and many imperfectly consolidated kinds, like clay,
are jointed. Joints are cracks or planes of division
which are usually approximately vertical and traverse
the same mass of rock in several different directions.
They are distinguished from stratification planes by
being rarely horizontal, and from both stratification
and cleavage planes by being actual cracks or fractures,
and by dividing the rock into blocks instead of
sheets or layers. The art of quarrying consists in
removing these natural blocks; and most of the broad
.pn +1 // 187.png
flat surfaces of rock exposed in quarries, are the joint-planes
(#Fig. 36:fig_36#). Some of the most familiar features
of rock-scenery are also due to this structure, cliffs,
ravines, etc., being largely determined in form and
direction by the principal systems of joints; and we
have already seen that the same is true of veins and
dikes.
Joints are divided by their characteristics and modes
of origin into three classes as follows:—
.pm hi fig_36 600px "Fig. 36.—Quarry showing two systems of parallel joints."
1. The parallel and intersecting joints.—This is by
far the most important class, and has its best development
in stratified rocks, such as sandstone, slate, limestone,
etc. These joints are straight and continuous
cracks which may often be traced for considerable
distances on the surface. They usually run in several
definite directions, being arranged in sets or systems
by their parallelism. Thus in #Fig. 36:fig_36# one set of
joints is represented by the broad, flat surfaces in
.pn +1 // 188.png
light, and a second set crossing the first nearly at right
angles, by the narrower faces in shadow. By the intersections
of the different sets of joints the rock is
divided into angular blocks.
Although many explanations of this class of joints
have been proposed, it has long been the general
opinion of geologists that they are due to the contraction
of the rocks, i.e., that they are shrinkage cracks.
We shall soon see, however, that they lack the most
important characters of cracks known to be due to
shrinkage; and the present writer has advanced the
view that movements of the earth’s crust, and especially
the swift, vibratory movements known as earthquakes,
are a far more adequate and probable cause. It is
well known that earthquakes break the rocks; and, if
space permitted, it could be shown that the earthquake-fractures
must possess all the essential features of parallel
and intersecting joints.
.pm hi fig_37 590px "Fig. 37.—Columnar dike."
2. Contraction joints or shrinkage cracks.—That
many cracks in rocks are due to shrinkage, there can
be no doubt. The shrinkage may result from the
drying of sedimentary rocks; but more generally from
the cooling of eruptive rocks. Every one has noticed
in warm weather, the cracks in layers of mud or clay
on the shore, or where pools of water have dried up;
and we have already seen that these sun-cracks are
often preserved in the hard rocks. They have certain
characteristic features by which they may be distinguished
from the joints of the first class. They divide
the clay into irregular, angular blocks, which often
show a tendency to be hexagonal instead of quadrangular.
The cracks are continually uniting and
.pn +1 // 189.png
dividing, but are not parallel, and rarely cross each
other. Sun-cracks never affect more than a few feet
in thickness of clay, and are an insignificant structural
feature of sedimentary rocks. In eruptive rocks, on the
other hand, the contraction joints have a very extensive,
and, in some cases, a very perfect development,
culminating in the prismatic or columnar jointing of
the basaltic rocks. This remarkable structure has
long excited the interest of geologists, and, although
the basalt columns were once regarded as crystals, and
later as a species of concretionary structure, it is now
generally recognized as the normal result of slow cooling
.pn +1 // 190.png
in a homogeneous, brittle mass. The columns are
normally hexagonal, and perpendicular to the cooling
surface, being vertical in horizontal sheets and lava
flows, as in the classic examples of the Giant’s Causeway
and Fingal’s Cave, and horizontal in vertical
dikes (#Fig. 37:fig_37#). They begin to grow on the cooling
surface of the mass and gradually extend toward the
centre, so that dikes frequently show two independent
sets of columns.
3. The concentric joints of granitic rocks.—In
quarries of granite and other massive crystalline rocks,
it is often very noticeable that the rock is divided into
more or less regular layers by cracks which are approximately
parallel with the surface of the ground,
some of the granite hills having thus a structure resembling
that of an onion. The layers are thin near
the surface, become thicker and less distinct downwards,
and cannot usually be traced below a depth of
fifty or sixty feet. These concentric cracks are of
great assistance in quarrying, and are now regarded as
due to the expansion of the superficial portions of the
granite caused by the heat of the sun. In reference
to this view of their origin these may be properly
called expansion joints.
Structure of Mountain-chains.—Mountains are
primarily of two kinds,—volcanic and non-volcanic.
The structure of the former belongs properly with the
original structures of the volcanic rocks; but the
latter—the true mountains—owe their internal structure
and altitude or relief almost wholly to the crumpling
and mashing together of great zones of the earth’s
crust, being, as already pointed out, the culminating
.pn +1 // 191.png
points of the plication, cleavage, and faulting of the
strata. “A mountain-chain consists of a great plateau
or bulge of the earth’s surface, often hundreds of miles
wide and thousands of miles long. This is usually
more or less distinctly divided by great longitudinal
valleys into parallel ranges and ridges; and these,
again, are serrated along their crests, or divided into
peaks by transverse valleys. In many cases this ideal
chain is far from realized, but we have instead, a great
bulging of the earth’s crust composed on the surface
of an inextricable tangle of ridges and valleys of erosion,
running in all directions. In all cases, however,
the erosion has been immense; for the mountain-chains
are the great theatres of erosion as well as of
igneous action. As a general fact, all that we see,
when we stand on a mountain-chain—every peak and
valley, every ridge and cañon, all that constitutes scenery—is
wholly due to erosion.”—Le Conte.
The structure of mountains thus fells under two
heads: (1) The internal structure and altitude, which
are due to the action of the subterranean agencies.
(2) The external forms, the actual relief, which are
the product chiefly of the superficial agencies or
erosion. The study of mountains has shown that:
(1) They are composed of very thick sedimentary formations.
Thus the sedimentary rocks have a thickness
of 40,000 feet in the Alleghanies; of 50,000 feet in the
Alps; and of two to ten miles in all important mountain-chains.
Such thick deposits of sediments, as we
have already seen, must be formed on a subsiding sea-floor,
and in many mountain-chains, as in the Alleghanies,
the great bulk of these sediments are still
.pn +1 // 192.png
below the level of the sea. Again, thick sedimentary
deposits can only be formed in the shallow, marginal
portions of the sea; and when such a belt of thick
shore deposits yields to the powerful horizontal thrust,
and is crumpled and mashed up, it is greatly shortened
in the direction of the pressure and thickened vertically,
so that its upper surface is lifted high above the
level of the sea, and a mountain-chain is formed and
added to the edge of the continent. We thus find an
explanation of the important fact that on the several
continents, but notably on the two Americas, the principal
mountain-ranges are near to and parallel with the
coast lines.
2. The mountain-forming sediments are usually
strongly folded and faulted, and exhibit slaty cleavage
wherever they are susceptible of that structure; and
the older rocks, especially, in mountains are often
highly metamorphosed, and are traversed by numerous
veins and dikes, the infallible signs of intense
igneous activity.
“In other words, mountain regions have been the
great theatres—(1) of sedimentation before the mountains
were formed; (2) of plication and upheaval in
the formation of the range; and (3) of erosion which
determined the present outline. Add to these the
metamorphism, the faults, veins, dikes, and volcanic
outbursts, and it is seen that all geological agencies
concentrate there.”—Le Conte.
Since mountain-ranges are great up-swellings or
bulgings of the strata, their structure is always essentially
anticlinal; and they sometimes consist of a single
more or less denuded anticline (#Fig. 38:fig_38#), the
.pn +1 // 193.png
oldest and lowest strata exposed forming the summit
of the range. More commonly, however, the single
great arch or uplift is modified by a series of longitudinal
folds, as shown in the section of the Jura Mountains
(#Fig. 21:fig_21#). Still more commonly the folds are
closely pressed together, overturned, broken, and almost
inextricably complicated by smaller folds, contortions,
and slips.
.pm hi fig_38 370px "Fig. 38.—Anticlinal mountain."
The strata on the flanks of the mountains are usually
less disturbed than those near the axis of the range,
and are sometimes seen to rest unconformably against
the latter. In this way it is proved that some ranges
are formed by successive upheavals. But we have
still more conclusive evidence that mountains are
formed with extreme slowness in the fact that rivers
sometimes cut directly through important ranges.
This proves, first, that the river is older than the
mountains; second, that the deepening of its channel
has always kept pace with the elevation of the range.
Concretions and Concretionary Structure.—Folds,
cleavage, faults, and joints—all the subsequent
structures considered up to this point—are the product
of mechanical forces. Chemical agencies, although
very efficient in altering the composition and texture
of rocks, are almost powerless as regards the development
.pn +1 // 194.png
of rock-structures; and the only important
structure having a chemical origin is that named
above.
Concretions are formed by the segregation of one
or more of the constituents of a rock. But there are
three distinct kinds of segregation. If the water percolating
through or pervading a rock, dissolves a certain
mineral and afterwards deposits it in cavities or
fissures, amygdules, geodes, or veins are the result. If
the mineral is deposited about particular points in the
mass of the rock, it may form crystals, the rock becoming
porphyritic; or it may not crystallize, but build
up instead the rounded forms called concretions, the
texture or structure of the rock becoming concretionary.
A great variety of minerals occur in the form of concretions,
but this mode of occurrence is especially
characteristic of certain constituents of rocks, such as
calcite, siderite, limonite, hematite, and quartz. Concretions
may be classified according to the nature of
the segregating minerals; and in each class we may
distinguish the pure from the impure concretions. A
pure concretion is one entirely composed of the segregating
mineral. Most nodules of flint and chert,
quartz, geodes, concretions of pyrite, and many hollow
iron-balls are good illustrations of this class. In all
these cases the segregating mineral has been able in
some way to remove the other constituents of the rock,
and make room for itself. But in other cases it has
lacked this power, and has been deposited between
and around the grains of sand, clay, etc.; and the
concretions are consequently impure, being composed
partly of the segregating mineral, and partly of the
.pn +1 // 195.png
other constituents of the rock. The calcareous concretions
known as clay-stones are a good example of
this class, being simply discs of clay, all the minute
interstices of which have been filled with segregated
calcite. The solid iron-balls are masses of sand filled
in a similar manner with iron oxides.
Concretions are of all sizes, from those of microscopic
smallness in some oölitic limestones up to those
twenty-five feet or more in diameter in some sandstones.
The point of deposition, when a concretion begins to
grow, is often determined by some concrete particle,
as a grain or crystal of the same or a different mineral,
a fragment of a shell, or a bit of vegetation, which thus
becomes the nucleus of the concretion. The ideal or
typical concretion is spherical; but the form is influenced
largely by the structure of the rock. In porous
rocks, like sandstone, they are frequently very perfect
spheres; but in impervious rocks, like clay, they are
flat or disc-shaped, because the water passes much
more freely in the direction of the bedding than across
it; while the concretions in limestones, the nodules of
flint and chert, are often remarkable for the irregularity
of their forms. In all sedimentary rocks the concretions
are arranged more or less distinctly in layers
parallel with the stratification, which usually passes
undisturbed through the impure concretions. Many
silicious and ferruginous concretions are hollow, apparently
in consequence of the contraction of the substance
after its segregation; and the shrinkage due to
drying is still further indicated by the cracks in the
septaria stones. The hollow, silicious concretions are
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usually lined with crystals (geodes), while the hollow
iron-balls frequently enclose a smaller concretion.
Rocks often have a concretionary structure when
there are no distinct or separable concretions. And
the appearance of a concretionary structure (pseudo-concretions)
is often the result of the concentric decomposition
of the rocks by weathering, as explained
on page #13#.
Subsequent Structures produced by the Superficial
or Aqueous Agencies.—The superficial agencies,
as we have seen in the section on dynamical
geology, are, in general terms, water, air, and organic
matter. Geologically considered, the results which
they accomplish, may be summed up under the two
heads of deposition and erosion—the formation of
new rocks in the sea, and the destruction of old rocks
on the land. In the rôle of rock-makers they produce
the very important original structures of the stratified
rocks; while as agents of erosion they develop the
most salient of the subsequent structures of the earth’s
crust—the infinitely varied relief of its surface. As a
general rule, to which recent volcanoes are one important
exception, the original and subterranean structures
of rocks are only indirectly, and often very
slightly, represented in the topography; for this, as
we have seen, is almost wholly the product of erosion.
Therefore, what we have chiefly to consider in this section
is to what extent and how erosion is influenced
by the pre-existing structures of rocks.
Horizontal or very slightly undulating strata, especially
if the upper beds are harder than those below,
give rise by erosion to flat-topped ridges or table-mountains
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(#Fig. 39:fig_39#). But if the strata be softer and
of more uniform texture, erosion yields rounded hills,
often very steep, and sometimes passing into pinnacles,
as in the Bad Lands of the west. Broad, open folds,
as we have seen, give, normally, synclinal hills and
anticlinal valleys (#Fig. 22:fig_22#), when the erosion is well
advanced. But in more strongly, closely folded rocks
the ridges and valleys are determined chiefly by the
outcrops of harder and softer strata, as shown in #Fig. 40:fig_40#,
the symmetry of the reliefs depending upon the
dip of the strata. This principle of unequal hardness
or durability also determines most of the topographic
features in regions of metamorphic and crystalline
rocks, in which the stratification is obscure or wanting.
.pm hi fig_39 575px "Fig. 39.—Horizontal strata and table-mountains."
.pm hi fig_40 600px "Fig. 40.—Ridges due to the outcrops of hard strata."
The boldness of the topography, and the relation of
depth to width in valleys, depends largely upon the
altitude above the sea; but partly, also, upon the distribution
of the rainfall, the drainage channels or valleys
being narrowest and most sharply defined in arid
regions traversed by rivers deriving their waters from
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distant mountains. That these are the conditions
most favorable for the formation of cañons is proved
by the fact that they are fully realized in the great
plateau country traversed by the Colorado and its
tributaries, a district which leads the world in the magnitude
and grandeur of its cañons. But deep gorges
and cañons will be formed wherever a considerable
altitude, by increasing the erosive power of the streams,
enables them to deepen their channels much more
rapidly than the general face of the country is lowered
by rain and frost. This is the secret of such cañons
as the Yosemite Valley, and the gorge of the Columbia
River, and probably of the fiords which fret the north-west
coasts of this continent and Europe. For a full
description and illustration of the topographic types
developed by the action of water and ice upon the
surface of the land, and of the various characteristic
forms of marine erosion, teachers are referred to the
larger works named in the introduction, especially
Le Conte’s Elements of Geology, and to the better
works on physical geography. We will, in closing this
section, merely glance at some of the minor erosion-forms,
which are not properly topographic, but may be
often illustrated by class-room and museum specimens.
Mere weathering, the action of rain and frost, develops
very characteristic surfaces upon different classes of
rocks, delicately and accurately expressing in relief
those slight differences in texture, hardness, and solubility,
which must exist even in the most homogeneous
rocks. Every one recognizes on sight the hard, smooth
surfaces of water-worn rocks. They are exemplified
in beach and river pebbles, in sea-worn cliffs, and
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where rivers flow over the solid ledges. The pot-hole
(page #17#) is a well-marked and specially interesting
rock-form, due to current or river erosion.
Ice has also left highly characteristic traces upon
the rocks in all latitudes covered by the great ice-sheet.
These consist chiefly of polished, grooved, and
scratched or striated surfaces, the grooves and scratches
showing the direction in which the ice moved.
The organic agencies, as already noted, accomplish
very little in the way of erosion, especially in the hard
rocks, but the rock-borings made by certain mollusks
and echinoderms may be mentioned as one unimportant
but characteristic form due to organic erosion.
.pn +1 // 200.png
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APPENDIX
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The following collections are especially prepared
and arranged for use with this text:
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Weathering
1 Diabase
*2 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ weathered
*3 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ disintegrated
°4 Felsite: Angular fragment
°5 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ Water rounded pebble
Formation of Coals
*6 Peat
°7 Lignite
8 Bituminous
*9 Cannel coal
°10 Anthracite
°11 Native coke
Rock-forming Minerals
*12 Graphite
°13 Halite
*14 Limonite
*15 Hematite
*16 Magnetite
17 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Lodestone
*18 Quartz: Glassy
19 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Flint
20 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Chert
21 Opalized wood
*22 Gypsum
*23 Calcite
°24 Dolomite
25 Siderite
*26 Hornblende
°27 Pyroxene
*28 Muscovite
29 Biotite
*30 Orthoclase
°31 Albite
*32 Labradorite
*33 Kaolinite
34 Talc
*35 Serpentine
°36 Chlorite
37 Glauconite (Green Sand)
38 Chrysolite
39 Garnet
40 Pyrite
Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rocks
*41 Conglomerate: Breccia
*42 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Pudding-stone
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*43 Sand: Quartz
°44 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ Magnetite
*45 Sandstone: Ferruginous
46 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Calcareous
47 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Arkose
*48 Quartzite
49 Clay: Boulder
°50 \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ Fire
*51 Shale
*52 \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \^Carbonaceous
53 Slate: Roofing
54 \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \^Flagstone
55 Porcelainite
56 Tripolite
°57 Siliceous Tufa
58 Novaculite
°59 Asphaltum
°60 Oil Sand
*61 Limestone: Fossiliferous
*62 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Coquina
*63 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Chalk
64 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Crystalline
°65 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Compact
66 \ \ \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \^Hydraulic
67 Calcareous Tufa
68 Dolomite
69 Rock Salt
°70 Phosphate Nodule
*71 Gneiss: Granitoid
*72 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Micaceous
73 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Hornblendic
°74 Norite: Hypersthenite
*75 Schist: Mica
76 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ Hornblende
77 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ Talc
78 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ Chlorite
79 Amphibolite
80 Soapstone
81 Verd Antique (Serpentine)
Igneous Rocks
*82 Granite: Binary
83 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Muscovite
*84 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Biotite
85 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Hornblendic
86 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Red
*87 Syenite
88 \ \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ Elæolite
*89 Diorite
*90 Diabase: Trap
*91 Rhyolite
92 Trachyte
*93 Obsidian
94 Pumice
°95 Petrosilex
*96 Andesite
*97 Basalt
98 \ \ \ \ “\ \ \ \ \ \ \ vesicular Lava
*99 Melaphyr: Amygdaloidal
°100 Volcanic Tuff
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Weathering
1 Diabase
*2 “ weathered
*3 “ disintegrated
°4 Felsite: Angular fragment
°5 “ Water rounded pebble
Formation of Coals
*6 Peat
°7 Lignite
8 Bituminous
*9 Cannel coal
°10 Anthracite
°11 Native coke
Rock-forming Minerals
*12 Graphite
°13 Halite
*14 Limonite
*15 Hematite
*16 Magnetite
17 “ Lodestone
*18 Quartz: Glassy
19 “ Flint
20 “ Chert
21 Opalized wood
*22 Gypsum
*23 Calcite
°24 Dolomite
25 Siderite
*26 Hornblende
°27 Pyroxene
*28 Muscovite
29 Biotite
*30 Orthoclase
°31 Albite
*32 Labradorite
*33 Kaolinite
34 Talc
*35 Serpentine
°36 Chlorite
37 Glauconite (Green Sand)
38 Chrysolite
39 Garnet
40 Pyrite
Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rocks
*41 Conglomerate: Breccia
*42 “ Pudding-stone
// 201.png
*43 Sand: Quartz
°44 “ Magnetite
*45 Sandstone: Ferruginous
46 “ Calcareous
47 “ Arkose
*48 Quartzite
49 Clay: Boulder
°50 “ Fire
*51 Shale
*52 “ Carbonaceous
53 Slate: Roofing
54 “ Flagstone
55 Porcelainite
56 Tripolite
°57 Siliceous Tufa
58 Novaculite
°59 Asphaltum
°60 Oil Sand
*61 Limestone: Fossiliferous
*62 “ Coquina
*63 “ Chalk
64 “ Crystalline
°65 “ Compact
66 “ Hydraulic
67 Calcareous Tufa
68 Dolomite
69 Rock Salt
°70 Phosphate Nodule
*71 Gneiss: Granitoid
*72 “ Micaceous
73 “ Hornblendic
°74 Norite: Hypersthenite
*75 Schist: Mica
76 “ Hornblende
77 “ Talc
78 “ Chlorite
79 Amphibolite
80 Soapstone
81 Verd Antique (Serpentine)
Igneous Rocks
*82 Granite: Binary
83 “ Muscovite
*84 “ Biotite
85 “ Hornblendic
86 “ Red
*87 Syenite
88 “ Elæolite
*89 Diorite
*90 Diabase: Trap
*91 Rhyolite
92 Trachyte
*93 Obsidian
94 Pumice
°95 Petrosilex
*96 Andesite
*97 Basalt
98 “ vesicular Lava
*99 Melaphyr: Amygdaloidal
°100 Volcanic Tuff
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Collection No. F1. Entire list of 100 museum size specimens (3¼ × 4¼), numbered, labelled and mounted on blocks or in improved trays, for museum display and laboratory work|$40.00
(The same, labelled but unmounted, $30.00)
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Collection No. F2. Same as above, but small museum size, mounted in improved trays (2½ × 3½)|$25.00
Collection No. F3. Same as F2, but hand size specimens (2 × 2)|12.50
Collection No. F4. 80 specimens, omitting those marked (°), in individual trays (2½ × 1¾) and two cloth-board cases, numbered to correspond with accompanying printed list (no labels)|5.00
Collection No. F5. 40 specimens marked (*), mounted as collection F4|2.50
Collection No. F6. 100 pupils’ fragments (1 × 1), numbered, in paper bags. (Single collection $1.25.) In lots of 5 or more, each|1.00
Collection No. F7. 80 pupils’ fragments (like F6). (Single $1.00.) In lots of 5 or more, each|.75
Collection No. F8. 40 pupils’ fragments (like F6). (Single 50c.) In lots of 5 or more, each|.40
Collection No. F9. 25 museum size specimens, illustrating structure, faults, stratification, etc. Mounted and labelled|10.00
.ta-
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Collection No. F1. Entire list of 100 museum size specimens (3¼ × 4¼), numbered, labelled and mounted on blocks or in improved trays, for museum display and laboratory work|$40.00
(The same, labelled but unmounted, $30.00)
// 202.png
Collection No. F2. Same as above, but small museum size, mounted in improved trays (2½ × 3½)|$25.00
Collection No. F3. Same as F2, but hand size specimens (2 × 2)|12.50
Collection No. F4. 80 specimens, omitting those marked (°), in individual trays (2½ × 1¾) and two cloth-board cases, numbered to correspond with accompanying printed list (no labels)|5.00
Collection No. F5. 40 specimens marked (*), mounted as collection F4|2.50
Collection No. F6. 100 pupils’ fragments (1 × 1), numbered, in paper bags. (Single collection $1.25.) In lots of 5 or more, each|1.00
Collection No. F7. 80 pupils’ fragments (like F6). (Single $1.00.) In lots of 5 or more, each|.75
Collection No. F8. 40 pupils’ fragments (like F6). (Single 50c.) In lots of 5 or more, each|.40
Collection No. F9. 25 museum size specimens, illustrating structure, faults, stratification, etc. Mounted and labelled|10.00
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For further information or in ordering, address
Ward’s Natural Science Establishment
84-102 College Ave.,\ \ \ \ \ \ Rochester, N. Y.
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Transcriber’s note:
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Specimen numbers have been regularised as medium weight.
Page 7, ‘LeConte’ changed to ‘Le Conte,’ “By Prof. Joseph Le Conte.”
Page 12, ‘contined’ changed to ‘continued,’ “continued exposure to the”
Page 28, comma changed to full stop, “associated with beds of coal.”
Page 34, ‘or’ changed to upright, “superficial or aqueous agencies”
Page 96, all instances of ‘per cent’ changed to ‘per cent.’: “60 per cent.”, “30 per cent.”, “85 per cent.”
Page 97, full stop inserted after ‘crust,’ “of the earth’s crust. The name”
Page 105, specimen number absent in original.
Page 106, ‘green sand’ changed to ‘greensand,’ “greensand, and serpentine”
Page 107, ‘magnesion’ changed to ‘magnesian,’ “the entire rock is magnesian,”
Page 108, ‘70’ changed to ‘69,’ “classification on page 69”
Page 114, full stop inserted after ‘rocks,’ “the stratified rocks. Like”
Page 126, full stop inserted after ‘veins,’ “in veins. Those fissures”
Page 146, instance of thousands formatted without comma delimiter: “4000 to 5000 feet”
Page 188, instance of thousands formatted without comma delimiter: “7000 feet high”
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