Online Encyclopedia

NEPHELINITES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 384 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NEPHELINITES  . The

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group of effusive rocks which contains
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nepheline with
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plagioclase felspar is subdivided into nephelinetephrites and nepheline-basanites, while those which contain nepheline but not felspar are nephelinites and nepheline-basalts . The tephrites differ from the basanites in the absence of
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olivine, and the same distinction subsists between the nephelinites and nepheline-basalts . Lavas with nepheline, plagioclase and
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augite = nephelinetephrites . Lavas with nepheline, plagioclase, augite and olivine= nephelinebasanites . Lavas with nepheline and augite = nephelinites . Lavas with nepheline, augite and olivine = nepheline-basalts . In their essential and
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accessory minerals, appearance and structure, these rocks have much in
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common, and they tend to occur in a natural association as basic rocks comparatively rich in alkalis and alumina . The nephelinites and tephrites are ratherclosely linked to the phonolites and pass into them by various gradations . They are usually richer in alkalis and
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silica and contain less iron, lime and
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magnesia than the basanites and nepheline-basalts, a difference which finds expression in the presence of olivine and the smaller amount of felspars and felspathoids in the latter . The nepheline is colourless and transparent when fresh, often in six-sided prisms, but also as irregular interstitial masses filling the spaces between the other minerals, and hard to identify owing to its low double refraction and frequent decomposition .
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Leucite appears in some tephrites; hauyne is more frequent as small dodecahedra often filled with black inclusions .

The augite varies a

good
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deal, being bright green or dark green (aegirine) and rich in soda in some tephrites and nephelinites, while in basanites and basalts it is often brown " basaltic " augite or
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purple titaniferous " augite . It has often good crystalline form, and occurs as eight-sided
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monoclinic prisms, but the soda augites may be of
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late crystallization and form mossy or irregular growths in the
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matrix . Brown
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hornblende is much less common, and a red
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biotite is very characteristic of certain nephelinites . Of the felspars, labradorite is probably the most common, with more acid varieties of plagioclase . Sanidine is by no means absent, but may be considered as an accessory . The olivine presents no peculiarities . Melilite, perofskite, psetidobrookite, melanite garnet, iron oxides,
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apatite and
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chromite are occasionally met with, All these rocks are practically confined to lavas of
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Tertiary and
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recent age, though some occur as dikes or small intrusive masses . The plutonic facies of these rocks are found among the theralites, shonkinites, essexites and 'ijolites . In the
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British Isles they are exceedingly scarce, though nepheline-basanite occurs in a dike which is presumably Tertiary, cutting the Triassic rocks at Butterton in
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Staffordshire, and nepheline-
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basalt has been found in a single neck at John o' Groat's in
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Caithness and at one or two places near North Berwick in Haddingtonshire . They attain a
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great development in the Canary Islands (Teneriffe,
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Grand Canary, &c.) and in the Azores, Cape Verde Islands and Fernando Noronha . In Germany they are represented among the Tertiary eruptive rocks of the Rhine
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district and Thuringia, at the
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extinct craters of the Eiffel and at the Kaiserstuhl . In central Bohemia there are many occurrences of nepheline-tephrites, basanites and basalts which though
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fine grained contain all their minerals in excellent preservation .

The nephelinite of Katzenbuckel in the

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Odenwald is well known . Contrasted with the phonolites and leucitophyres these rocks are scarce in Italy and the Mediterranean province, but leucite-bearing nepheline-tephrites occur at
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Monte
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Vulture and nepheline-basalts in Tripoli . In
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America these rocks occur in
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Texas, in the Bearpaw Mountains of
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Montana and at Cripple Creek,
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Colorado . From
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Argentina some members have been described : thay have a great extension in East Africa (
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Somaliland and
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Masai-
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land) and occur also in North
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Nigeria . A few also have been described from New South Wales, New Zealand (
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Dunedin) and
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Tasmania . (J . S .

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