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What is Pumice?
Pumice is a light-colored, extremely porous igneous rock that forms during explosive volcanic eruptions. It is used as aggregate in lightweight concrete, as landscaping aggregate, and as an abrasive in a variety of industrial and consumer products. Many specimens have a high enough porosity that they can float on water until they slowly become waterlogged.
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Prospecting for Peridotite
Peridotite bodies exposed at Earth’s surface are rapidly attacked by weathering. They can then be obscured by soil, sediment, glacial till, and vegetation. Finding a peridotite body as small as a kimberlite pipe, which might be only a few hundred yards across, can be very difficult. Because peridotite often has magnetic properties that are distinctly…
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Chromite in Peridotite
Some peridotites contain significant amounts of chromite. Some of these form when a subsurface magma slowly crystallizes. During the early stages of crystallization, the highest-temperature minerals such as olivine, orthopyroxene, clinopyroxene, and chromite begin to crystallize from the melt. The crystals are heavier than the melt and sink to the bottom of the melt. These…
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Diamonds and Peridotite
The formation of diamonds requires very high temperatures and pressures that only occur on Earth at depths of 100 miles below the surface and at locations in the mantle where temperatures are at least 2000 degrees Fahrenheit. The diamonds are delivered to the surface in pieces of rock, known as xenoliths, which are torn from…
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Ophiolites, Pipes, Dikes and Sills
Earth’s mantle is thought to be composed mainly of peridotite. Some of the occurrences of peridotite on Earth’s surface are thought to be rocks from the mantle that have been brought up from depth by deep-source magmas. Ophiolites and pipes are two structures that have brought mantle peridotite to the surface. Peridotite is also found…
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Alteration of Peridotite
Peridotite is a rock type that is more representative of Earth’s mantle than of the crust. The minerals that compose it are generally high-temperature minerals that are unstable at Earth’s surface. They are quickly altered by hydrothermal solutions and weathering. Those that contain magnesium-oxide-bearing minerals can alter to form carbonates, such as magnesite or calcite, which are much…
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Many Types of Peridotite
The peridotite “family” contains a number of different intrusive igneous rocks. These include lherzolite, harzburgite, dunite, wehrlite, and kimberlite (see photos). Most of them have an obvious green color, attributed to their olivine content.
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What is Peridotite?
Peridotite is a generic name used for coarse-grained, dark-colored, ultramafic igneous rocks. Peridotites usually contain olivine as their primary mineral, frequently with other mafic minerals such as pyroxenes and amphiboles. Their silica content is low compared to other igneous rocks, and they contain very little quartz and feldspar. Peridotites are economically important rocks because they often contain chromite – the only ore of chromium; they can be source rocks for diamonds;…
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A Confusion of Names
Flint is a microcrystalline variety of quartz. Materials of this description have been given a wide variety of names, including chert, jasper, agate, and chalcedony. Most geologists use the word “chert” instead of “flint”. Some people believe that the name “flint” should be reserved for dark-colored chert that formed as nodules in limestone or chalk.…
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Flint as a Construction Material
Where flint is abundant it is sometimes used as a construction material. It is very durable and resists weathering better than almost any other natural stone. It is common to see walls, homes, and larger buildings that are built partially or entirely with flint as a facing stone in southern England and many parts of Europe.
