Online Encyclopedia

LEUCITE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 504 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEUCITE  , a

rock-forming
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mineral composed of potassium and aluminium metasilicate KAl(SiO1)2• Crystals have the form of cubic icositetrahedra 12111, but, as first observed by
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Sir David Brewster in 1821, they are not optically isotropic, and are there-fore pseudo-cubic . Goniometric measurements made by G. vom Rath in 1873 led him to refer the crystals to the tetragonal
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system, the faces o being distinct from those lettered i in the adjoining figure .
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Optical investigations have since proved the crystals to be still more complex in character, and to consist of several orthorhombic or
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monoclinic individuals, which are optically biaxial and repeatedly twinned, giving rise to twin-lamellae and to striations on the faces . When the crystals are raised to a temperature of about 5oo° C. they become optically isotropic, the twin-lamellae and striations disappearing, reappearing, however, when the crystals are again cooled . This pseudo-cubic character of leucite rs exactly the same as that of the mineral
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boracite (q.v.) . The crystals are white (hence the name suggested by A . G . Werner in 1791, from Aevicbc) or ash-grey in colour, and are usually dull and opaque, but sometimes transparent and glassy; they are brittle and break with a conchoidal fracture . The hardness is 5.5 , and the specific gravity 2.5 . Enclosures of other minerals, arranged in concentric zones, are frequently
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present in the crystals . On account of the colour and form of the crystals the mineral was early known as " white garnet." French authors employ R . J .

Hatly's name " amphigene." (L . J . S.) Leucile Rocks.—Although rocks containing leucite are numerically scarce, many countries such as

England being entirely without them, yet they are of wide distribution, occurring in every quarter of the globe . Taken collectively, they exhibit a considerable variety of types and are of
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great
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Interest petrographically . For the presence of this mineral it is necessary that the
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silica percentage of the rock should not be high, for leucite never occurs in presence of
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free
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quartz . It is most
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common in lavas of
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recent and
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Tertiary age, which have a
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fair amount of potash, or at any
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rate have potash equal to or greater than soda; if soda preponderates
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nepheline occurs rather than leucite . In pre-Tertiary rocks leucite is uncommon, since it readily decomposes and changes to
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zeolites,
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analcite and other secondary minerals . Leucite also is rare in plutonic rocks and dike rocks, but leucite-
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syenite and leucite-tinguaite bear witness to the possibility that it may occur in this manner . The rounded shape of its crystals, their white or grey colour, and rough cleavage, make the presence of leucite easily determinable in many of these rocks by
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simple inspection, especially when the crystals are large . " Pseudo-leucites " are rounded areas consisting of felspar, nepheline, analcite, 504 &c., which have the shape, composition and sometimes even the crystalline forms of leucite ; they are probably pseudomorphs or paramorphs, which have
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developed from leucite because this mineral, in its isometric crystals, is not
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stable at ordinary temperatures and may be expected under favourable conditions to undergo spontaneous change into an aggregate of other minerals . Leucite is very often accompanied by nepheline,
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sodalite or nosean; other minerals which make their appearance with some frequency are melanite, garnet and mclilite . The plutonic leucite-bearing rocks are leucite-syenite and missourite .

Of these the former consists of

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orthoclase, nepheline, sodalite,
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diopside and aegirine,
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biotite and
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sphene . Two occurrences are known, one in
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Arkansas, the other in Sutherlandshire, Scotland . The Scottish rock has been called
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borolanite . Both examples show large rounded spots in the hand specimens; they are pseudo-leucites and under the microscope prove to consist of orthoclase, nepheline, sodalite and decomposition products . These have a radiate arrangement externally, but are of irregular structure at their centres; it is interesting to note that in both rocks melanite is an important
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accessory . The missourites are more basic and consist of leucite,
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olivine,
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augite and biotite; the leucite is partly fresh, partly altered to analcite, and the rock has a spotted character recalling that of the leucite-syenites . It has been found only in the Highwood Mountains of
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Montana . The leucite-hearing dike-rocks are members of the tinguaite and monchiquite groups . The leucite-tinguaites are usually pale grey or greenish in colour and consist principally of nepheline,
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alkali-felspar and aegirine . The latter forms bright green
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moss-like patches and growths of indefinite shape, or in other cases scattered acicular prisms, among the felspars and nephelines of the ground mass . Where leucite occurs, it is always eumorphic in small, rounded, many-sided crystals in the ground mass, or in larger masses which have the same characters as the pseudo-leucites . Biotite occurs in some of these rocks, and melanite also is present .

Nepheline appears to decrease in amount as leucite increases . Rocks of this

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group are known from Rio de Janeiro, Arkansas,
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Kola (in Finland), Montana and a few other places . In Greenland there are leucitetinguaites with much arfvedsonite (
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hornblende) and euclyalite . Wherever they occur they accompany leucite- and nephelinesyenites . Leucite-monchiquites are
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fine-grained dark rocks consisting of olivine, titaniferous augite and iron oxides, with a glassy ground mass in which small rounded crystals of leucite are scattered . They have been described from Bohemia . By far the greater number of the rocks which contain leucite are lavas of Tertiary or recent
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geological age . They are never acid rocks which contain quartz, but felspar is usually present, though there are certain groups of leucite lavas which are non-felspathic . Many of them also contain nepheline, sodalite, hauyne and nosean; the much rarer mineral melilite appears also in some examples . The commonest ferromagnesian mineral is augite (sometimes rich in soda), with olivine in the more basic varieties . Hornblende and biotite occur also, but are less common . Melanite is found in some of the lavas, as in the leucite-syenites .

The rocks in which orthoclase (or sanidine) is present in considerable amount are leucite-trachytes, leucite-phonolites and leucitophyres . Of these groups the two former, which are not sharply distinguished from one another by most authors, are common in the neighbourhood of

Rome (L .
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Bracciano, L . Bolsena) . They are of trachytic appearance, containing phenocysts of sanidine, leucite, augite and biotite . Sodalite or hauyne may also be present, but nepheline is typically absent . Rocks of this class occur also in the tuffs of the Phlegraean Fields, near Naples . The leucitophyres are rare rocks which have been described from various parts of the volcanic
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district of the Rhine (Olbrtick, Laacher See, &c.) and from
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Monte
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Vulture in Italy . They are rich in leucite, but contain also some sanidine and often much nepheline with hauyne or nosean . Their
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pyroxene is principally aegirine or aegirine augite; some of them are rich in melanite . Microscopic sections of some of these rocks are of great interest on account of their beauty and the variety of felspathoid minerals which they contain . In Brazil leucitophyres have been found which belong to the Carboniferous period .

Those leucite rocks which contain abundant essential

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plagioclase felspar are known as leucite-tephrites and leucite-basanites . The former consist mainly of plagioclase, leucite and augite, while the latter contain olivine in addition . The Ieucite is often present in two sets of crystals, both porphyritic and as an ingredient of the ground mass . It is always idiomorphic with rounded outlines . The felspar ranges from
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bytownite to
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oligoclase, being usually a variety of labradorite; orthoclase is scarce . The augite varies a good
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deal in character, being green, brown or
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violet, but aegirine (the dark green pleochroic soda-iron-augite) is seldom present . Among the accessory minerals biotite, brown hornblende, hauyne, iron oxides and
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apatite are the commonest; melanite and nepheline may also occur . The ground mass of these rocks is only occasionally rich in glass . The leucite-tephrites and leucite-basanites of Vesuvius and Somma are familiar examples of this class of rocks . They are hlack or ashy-grey in colour, often vesicular, and may contain many large grey phenocysts of leucite . Their black augite and yellow green olivine are also easily detected in hand specimens . From Volcanello, Sardinia and Roccamonfina similar rocks are obtained; they • occur also in Bohemia, in
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Java,
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Celebes,
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Kilimanjaro (Africa) and near 1 rebizond in
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Asia Minor .

Leucite lavas from which felspar is absent are divided into the leucitites and leucite basalts . The latter contain olivine, the former do not . Pyroxene is the usual ferromagnesian mineral, and resembles that of the tephrites and basanites . Sanidine, melanite, hauyne and perofskite are frequent accessory minerals in these rocks, and many of them contain melilite in some quantity . The well-known leucitite of the

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Capo di Bove, near Rome, is rich in this mineral, which forms irregular plates, yellow in the hand specimen, enclosing many small rounded crystals of leucite . Bracciano and Roccamonfina are other
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Italian localities for leucitite, and in Java, Montana, Celebes and New South Wales similar rocks occur . The leucitebasalts belong to more basic types and are rich in olivine and augite . They occur in great numbers in the Rhenish volcanic district (
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Eifel, Laacher See) and in Bohemia, and accompany tephrites or leucitites in Java, Montana, Celebes and Sardinia . The "
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peperino " of the neighbourhood of Rome is a leucitite tuff . U . S .

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