Online Encyclopedia

BRECCIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 482 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRECCIA  , in

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petrology, the name given to rocks consisting of angular fragments embedded in a
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matrix . They may be composed of volcanic rocks, limestones, siliceous charts, sand-stones, in fact of any kind of material, and the matrix, which usually corresponds to some extent to the fragments it encloses, may be siliceous, calcareous, argillaceous, &c . The distinctive character of the
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group is the sharp-edged and unworn shapes of the fragments; in conglomerates the pebbles are rounded and
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water-worn, having been transported by waves and currents from some distance . There are many ways in which breccias may originate . Some are formed by ordinary processes of atmospheric erosion; frost, rain and gravity break up exposed surfaces of rock and detach pieces of all sizes; in this way screes are formed at the bases of cliffs, and barren mountain-tops are covered with broken debris . If such accumulations gather and are changed into hard rock by pressure and other indurating agencies they make typical breccias . Conglomerates often pass into rocks of this type, the difference being merely that the fragments are of purely
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local origin, and are unworn because they have not been transported . In caves breccias of
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limestone are produced by the collapse of
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part of the roof, covering the floor with broken masses .
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Coral reefs often contain extensive areas of limestone breccia, formed of detached pieces of rock which have been dislodged from the
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surface and have been carried down the steep
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external slopes of the
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reef . Volcanic breccias are very
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common near active or
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extinct craters, as sudden outbursts of steam bear fragments from the older rocks and scatter them over the ground . Another group of breccias is due to crushing; these are produced in fissures, faults and
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veins, below the surface, and may be described as " crush-breccias " and " friction-breccias." Very important and well-known examples of this class occur as veinstones, which may be metalliferous or not . A fissure is formed, probably by slight crustal movements, and is subsequently filled with material deposited from solution (
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quartz,
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calcite,
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barytes, &c.) .

Very often displacement of the walls again takes

place, and the infilling or " veinstone " is torn apart and brecciated . It may then be cemented together by a further introduction of
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mineral
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matter, which may be the same as that first deposited or quite different . In important veins this
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process is often repeated several times: detached pieces of the country ,
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Brechin Castle played a piominent part in the Scottish War of rock are mingled with the shattered veinstone, and generally f Independence . In 1303 it withstood for twenty days a siege in experience alteration by the percolating mineral solutions . Other crush-breccias occurring on a much larger scale are due to the folding of strata which have unequal plasticities . If, for example, shales and sandstones are bent into a series of arches, the sandstones being harder and more resistant will tend to crack, while the shales, which are. soft and flow under
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great pressures, are injected into the crevices and
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separate the broken pieces from one another . Continued
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movement will give the brecciated fragments of
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sandstone a rounded form by rubbing them against one another, and, in this way, a crush-conglomerate is produced . Great masses of limestone in the
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Alps, Scottish Highlands, and all regions of intense folding are thus converted into breccias . Cherts frequently also show this structure; igneous rocks less commonly do so; but it is perhaps most common where there have been thin bedded alternations of rocks of different character, such as limestone and dolerite, limestone and
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quartzite, shale or phyllite and sandstone . Fault-breccias closely resemble vein-breccias, except that usually their fragments consist principally of the rocks which adjoin the fault and not of mineral deposits introduced in solution; but many veins occupy faults, and hence no hard and fast
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line can be
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drawn between these types of breccia . A third group of breccias is due to movement in a partly consolidated igneous rock, and may be called " fluxion-breccias."
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Lava streams, especially when they consist of rhyolite, dacite and some kinds of
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andesite, may rapidly solidify, and then become exceedingly brittle . If any part of the mass is still liquid, it may break up the solid crust by pressure from within and the angular fragments are enveloped by the fluid lava .

When the whole comes to

rest and cools, it forms a typical " volcanic-fluxion-breccia." The same phenomena are some-times exemplified in intrusive sills and sheets . The fissures which are occupied by igneous dikes may be the seat of repeated injections following one another at longer or shorter intervals; and the latter may shatter the earlier dike rocks, catching up the fragments . Among the older formations, especially when decomposition has gone on extensively, these fluxion and injection-breccias are often very hard to distinguish from the commoner volcanic-breccias and ash-beds, which have been produced by weathering, or by the explosive power of super-heated steam . (J . S .

End of Article: BRECCIA
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