PART II.
<<
Previous
|
Table of
Contents |
Next
>>
HYPERSTHENE-DACITES.
DISTRIBUTION AND DESCRIPTION
OF DACITE MASSES.
LLAO ROCK FLOW.
SPHERULITIC DACITE.
A specimen of spherulitic
dacite, No. 108, was collected on Llao Rock in 1883. The field label
accompanying the specimen does not state the exact location. In the hand
specimen this is seen to consist of a nearly black glass very thickly crowded
with brownish spherulites that measure from 3 to 5 millimeters in diameter. So
thickly crowded are these spherulites that they often interfere and make up much
more than one-half of the mass. The spherulites consist of two, sometimes three
parts. The center is of a dark-gray color, and has a very dense, felsitic
texture. Around this is a ring or zone about a millimeter wide, of a less dense
or even of minutely porous material, and of a brownish, reddish-brown, or light
grayish-brown color. Outside of this again occurs usually, but not always, the
third part, dense like the central portion, and either gray in color like the
center or of a deeper brown than the intermediate zone. Many of the spherulites
show gapping cracks that seem to be confined to the middle zone. There is,
however, no trace of lithophysal development. The inside of these cavities is
rough, and of about the same color as the middle zone of the spherulites in
which they lie. They do not appear to contain crystals. Upon cross fracture
these spherulites have a distinct radiated appearance. The customary phenocrysts
occur quite indifferently in the glassy portion as well as in the spherulites.
Under the microscope the glassy
groundmass is almost identically the same as that of the vitrophyric dacite
described above. The same colorless augite microlites of about the same size,
0.03 to 0.05 millimeter long by 0.003 millimeter wide, may be seen. A very
slight distinction may be noted in that these augite microlites are not
perfectly clear, but often have a small amount of black, opaque, dusty
matter—probably magnetite—either adhering to the outside or inclosed within.
Curved, black microlites were not observed. Most of the spherulites show two or
three periods of growth that correspond to the different colored zones
noticeable in the hand specimen. One or two appear to have had but one period of
growth—that corresponding to the inner portion of the others. This inner part
has a dirty-brown or grayish-brown color, lets through but little light, and
shows a distinctly fibrous radiating structure. The fibers are very fine, and
hardly distinguishable from each other. They polarize light feebly, and have a
positive extension. Owing to the partial opacity of this central portion, the
usual black cross is hardly discernible.
The portion of the spherulites
that belongs to the second or intermediate zone does not seem to be as porous as
the rather rough appearance in the hand specimen would indicate. It is, in fact,
mostly quite solid. It appears in a light-brown color, very much lighter than
the central part, and is composed essentially of distinct shreds of a colorless
mineral diverging from the center outward and branching at low angles. These
shreds are coarse enough to show extinction angles often quite oblique to their
longer axes. They have invariably a positive extension. In polarized light they
appear to continue the finer fibers of the central portion. Between the arms of
the branching positive shreds occurs frequently unindividualized matter that
shows feebly negative polarization—considering this substance to be also
fibrous; but all the more distinctly recognizable shreds are positive.
These coarse branching
shreds so closely correspond to the feldspar of the spherulites in the obsidian
of Obsidian Cliff in the Yellowstone National Park, as described by Iddings,a
and to that of the spherulites from the region of Rosita and Silver Cliff,
Custer County, Colo., as described by Cross,b
that, after studying thin sections prepared from spherulites from the latter
place, the writer has no hesitancy in pronouncing these in the Llao Rock dacite
as belonging to feldspar also. In their positive character they correspond to
the feldspar in many of the spherulites from Custer County, Colo. The brownish
color of this intermediate portion is due to the presence of brown, yellowish,
and reddish ferritic matter in the form of dust particles, and occasionally in
the form of minute scales. A radial arrangement of this ferritic matter is not
marked.
aSeventh Ann. Rept. U. S. Geol.
Survey, 1888, pp. 276-278.
bConstitution and origin of spherulites in acid eruptive
rocks: Bull. Philos. Soc. Washington, vol. XI, 1891 pp. 411-440.
The outer portion of these
spherulites when seen in thin sections appears to be identical with the central
core. It is often entirely missing, and when present does not usually envelop
the whole spherulite, but appears as irregular lobes or prolongations of the
same.
The strings of augite
microlites that accentuate the fluidal structure of the glassy part of the rock
pass uninterruptedly through these spherulites, and the phenocrysts lie embedded
in them as well as in the remainder of the rock, as is universally the case in
such bodies. Part of the ferritic matter may be seen to arise from the further
oxidation or hydration of the ore particles that adhere to the augite microlites.
The phenocrysts observed in
this rock are plagioclase hypersthene, hornblende and augite, with accessory
apatite and magnetite. The order of crystallization is (1) magnetite and
apatite, (2) plagioclase, (3) hypersthene, (4) augite and hornblende, (5) the
spherulitic forms; to which may be added augite and feldspar microlites of the
groundmass, which belong between 4 and 5. The hornblende is very sparingly
developed, as is usual, but occurs in both the brownish-green and in the
brownish-red varieties.
This spherulitic dacite should
be compared with the very similar occurrences in the Cloud Cap flow.
in the thin section of this
rock may also be seen a few small inclusions of identical nature with the
inclusions of older secretions to be found in No. 102, described immediately
below.