Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Metamorphic Facies Defined and Explained
Metamorphic Facies Defined and Explained          As metamorphic rocks change under heat and pressure, their ingredients recombine into new minerals that are suited to the conditions. The concept of metamorphic facies is a systematic way to look at the mineral assemblages in rocks and determine a potential range of pressure and temperature (P/T) conditions that were present when they formed.Ã           It should be noted that metamorphic facies are different than sedimentary facies, which include the environmental conditions present during deposition. Sedimentary facies can be further divided into lithofacies, which focus on a rocks physical characteristics, and biofacies, which focus on the paleontological attributes (fossils).Ã            Seven MetamorphicFacies      There are seven widely recognized metamorphic facies, ranging from the zeolite facies at low P and T to eclogite at very high P and T. Geologists determine a facies in the lab after examining many specimens under the microscope and doing bulk chemistry analyses. Metamorphic facies is not obvious in a given field specimen. To sum up, a metamorphic facies is the set of minerals found in a rock of a given composition. That mineral suite is taken as a sign of the pressure and temperature that made it.         Here are the typical minerals in rocks that are derived from sediments. That is, these will be found in slate, schist and gneiss. The minerals shown in parentheses are optional and dont always appear, but they can be essential for identifying a facies.         Zeolite facies: illite/phengite  chlorite  quartz (kaolinite, paragonite)Prehnite-pumpellyite facies: phengite  chlorite  quartz (pyrophyllite, paragonite, alkali feldspar, stilpnomelane, lawsonite)Greenschist facies: muscovite  chlorite  quartz (biotite, alkali feldspar, chloritoid, paragonite, albite, spessartine)Amphibolite facies: muscovite  biotite  quartz (garnet, staurolite, kyanite, sillimanite, andalusite, cordierite, chlorite, plagioclase, alkali feldspar)Granulite facies: alkali feldspar  plagioclase  sillimanite  quartz (biotite, garnet, kyanite, cordierite, orthopyroxene, spinel, corundum, sapphirine)Blueschist facies: phengite  chlorite  quartz (albite, jadeite, lawsonite, garnet, chloritoid, paragonite)Eclogite facies: phengite  garnet  quartz         Mafic rocks (basalt, gabbro, diorite, tonalite etc.) yield a different set of minerals at the same P/T conditions, as follows:         Zeolite facies: zeolite  chlorite  albite  quartz (prehnite, analcime, pumpellyite)Prehnite-pumpellyite facies: prehnite  pumpellyite  chlorite  albite  quartz (actinolite, stilpnomelane, lawsonite)Greenschist facies: chlorite  epidote  albite (actinolite, biotite)Amphibolite facies: plagioclase  hornblende (epidote, garnet, orthoamphibole, cummingtonite)Granulite facies: orthopyroxene  plagioclase (clinopyroxene, hornblende, garnet)Blueschist facies: glaucophane/crossite  lawsonite/epidote (pumpellyite, chlorite, garnet, albite, aragonite, phengite, chloritoid, paragonite)Eclogite facies: omphacite  garnet  rutile          Ultramafic rocks (pyroxenite, peridotite etc.) have their own version of these facies:         Zeolite facies: lizardite/chrysotile  brucite  magnetite (chlorite, carbonate)Prehnite-pumpellyite facies: lizardite/chrysotile  brucite  magnetite (antigorite, chlorite, carbonate, talc, diopside)Greenschist facies: antigorite  diopside  magnetite (chlorite, brucite, olivine, talc, carbonate)Amphibolite facies: olivine  tremolite (antigorite, talc, anthopyllite, cummingtonite, enstatite)Granulite facies: olivine  diopside  enstatite (spinel, plagioclase)Blueschist facies: antigorite  olivine  magnetite (chlorite, brucite, talc, diopside)Eclogite facies: olivine         Pronunciation: metamorphic FAY-sees or FAY-shees         Also Known As: metamorphic grade (partial synonym)    
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