The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks
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The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks

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eBook - ePub

The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks

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About This Book

The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks

The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks, Second Edition

This pocket-sized field guide describes how metamorphic rocks and rock masses may be observed, recorded and mapped in the field. Written at a level suitable for Earth Science undergraduate students, this book is an essential tool for any geologist — student, professional or amateur — faced with the task of making a general description of an area of metamorphic rocks. A clear, systematic framework, together with numerous colour diagrams, illustrations and checklists, enables readers with different backgrounds to produce useful descriptions, despite possible differences of background or specialist interest. Additional information is also provided to aid those who are undertaking field mapping courses or must compile field evidence into reports on the metamorphic evolution of a region. This book:

  • Shows the reader how to observe metamorphic rocks in the field, from the outcrop to the hand specimen scale
  • Is fully revised and updated to incorporate new developments in the field
  • Offers a user-friendly and accessible writing style including a revised format with tabbed sections for easy navigation
  • Covers key topics including classification and mapping of metamorphic rocks, understanding key textures and fabrics, and details on contacts and fault zones

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Yes, you can access The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks by Dougal Jerram, Mark Caddick in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Physical Sciences & Geology & Earth Sciences. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

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Year
2022
ISBN
9781118618677

1
INTRODUCTION AND OCCURRENCE

Schematic illustration of a classic old metamorphic map, the 1833 map of the geology of Massachusetts.
A classic old metamorphic map, the 1833 map of the geology of Massachusetts, from maps associated with Edward Hitchcock's ‘Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of Massachusetts’ (Amherst, Mass.: Press of J. S. and C. Adams, 1833).
Metamorphic rocks form a substantial proportion of the material that makes up the Earth's crust, and metamorphic processes have been almost continually occurring throughout geological time since the origin of that crust. Metamorphism can be defined simply as the process by which sedimentary or igneous rocks are transformed (metamorphosed) by re‐crystallisation due to changes in pressure, temperature, or fluid conditions. To complicate matters somewhat, metamorphism can of course also act on rocks that have already been metamorphosed previously, building layer upon layer of complexity into those rocks that record field evidence of some of Earth's most dynamic processes. Our understanding of metamorphism is somewhat limited by the fact that we are unable to directly observe it happening to the rocks. As you read this, metamorphism is in action all around the planet, in all aspects of the Earth's plate tectonic system (e.g. Figure 1.1), but we cannot directly see it (generally because it happens at depth and very slowly). In order to understand the processes and products of metamorphism and alteration in rocks, detailed fieldwork, petrography, experimental studies, and numerical modelling are required. It is important to note, however, that the very origin of metamorphic petrology (the science of understanding the distribution, structure, and origin of metamorphic rocks) is rooted in a tradition of careful and systematic field observation, and that this remains an absolute cornerstone of the discipline today. Since the late nineteenth century, Earth scientists have strived to develop an understanding of metamorphic processes by identifying the different types of key minerals, mineral assemblages, and structures present in the metamorphic rocks. Using these observations and knowledge of some fundamental principles, mineral reactions can be calculated and/or experimentally derived to help explain and understand the process by which the original rock was metamorphosed into its current state. These rocks often encode evolving conditions at tectonic plate boundaries, so deciphering their mineralogical history may be thought of as a window into the crustal‐scale processes that form, modify, and stabilise Earth's crust. Underpinning all of this is the petrologist's ability to identify, describe, relate, and collect metamorphic rocks in the field, and it is these skills which this book aims to explore and impart, by its use in the field description of metamorphic rocks.

1.1 The Importance of Fieldwork in Metamorphic Terrains

In many ways, metamorphic geology requires you to be skilful in most aspects of the Earth sciences. As metamorphic rocks can be formed from any original rock (the parent rock henceforth being called the protolith), an ability to identify and be familiar with the wide variety of minerals and textures of sedimentary and igneous rocks is a general requirement for any budding metamorphic geologist. Additionally, as the very processes involved in metamorphism are commonly associated with deformation, a keen understanding of structural geology and tectonics is also needed. In many ways, the metamorphic scientist needs to be a jack of all trades and a master of one!
Due to the potential complexity within metamorphic rocks, the importance of careful fieldwork cannot be overstated. The different types of observation that can be made at various scales in metamorphic terrains allow the student/researcher to build up a list of clues, like in a forensic study, which can be used to help derive the type of metamorphic rock, its protolith, and the range of processes that it has undergone to reach its present state. The map‐scale distribution of metamorphic rocks can reveal the processes that formed them, but as we discuss in the following chapters, the correct interpretation of even the smallest parts of a field area are rooted in good field observations. This book aims to help build you skills in this area! Careful identification of rocks and structures is all the more important when taking samples from the field back to the laboratory for further study and analysis. The record of structures within and around the rock mass may ultimately help you to better interpret features you subsequently see down the microscope or the data that you receive from laboratory analysis.
Schematic illustration of the plate tectonic settings where metamorphism is occurring around the world.
Figure 1.1 Schematic of the plate tectonic settings where metamorphism is occurring around the world (see also Figure 1.2).
Describable features which can be observed in metamorphic rock masses include:
  1. Pre‐metamorphic – e.g. bedding and other sedimentary features, contact relationships between batches of melt, or even fossils (though in most cases the features may be altered beyond normal recognition).
  2. Metamorphic – relating to local mineral changes due primarily to changing temperature and pressure.
  3. Metasomatic – involving the chemical transport and mineral change associated with fluids.
  4. Structural – relating to and recording the rock's deformation at any point in its history.
Limitations exist as to how much information one can record regarding any of these features without the need for microscopic and chemical measurements, which is the realm of specialist study that will be touched upon within this book but is not our major theme. With good field observations of mineralogy, texture, and structure, one should still be able to adequately describe the rock masses in terms of their types and occurrence, hopefully also being able to build up an inference of the evolving conditions of their formation. Such description is particularly appropriate for the production of geological maps, logs, and recordings of outcrop structures, which will be covered in more detail in Chapter 2.
This book forms a companion to the other texts in the geological field guide series, e.g. The Field Description of Igneous Rocks, Sedimentary Rocks in the Field, and The Mapping of Geological Structures, and as such does not cover in detail the pre‐metamorphic features of sediments and igneous bodies that may sometimes be preserved in metamorphic rocks. We do, however, show many examples of these in cases where they can either be shown to help in the identification of th...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Table of Contents
  3. Series Page
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. PREFACE – THE FIELD DESCRIPTION OF METAMORPHIC ROCKS
  7. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
  8. 1 INTRODUCTION AND OCCURRENCE
  9. 2 FIELD SKILLS AND MAPPING OUTCROP STRUCTURES
  10. 3 METAMORPHIC MINERALS, ROCK TYPES, AND CLASSIFICATION
  11. 4 UNDERSTANDING TEXTURES AND FABRICS 1
  12. 5 UNDERSTANDING TEXTURES AND FABRICS 2
  13. 6 CONTACTS, REACTION ZONES, AND VEINS
  14. 7 FAULTS, MYLONITES, AND CATACLASITES
  15. 8 SUMMARY TABLES, CHECKLISTS, AND MAPPING REPORT ADVICE
  16. FURTHER READING SUGGESTIONS
  17. Index
  18. End User License Agreement