Online Encyclopedia

PYROXENITE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 696 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PYROXENITE  , a

rock consisting essentially of minerals of the
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pyroxene
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group, such as
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augite and
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diallage,
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hypersthene,
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bronzite or
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enstatite . Names have been given to members of this group according to their component minerals, e.g. pyroxenite (augite), diallagite (diallage), hypersthenite (hypersthene), bronzitites (bronzite), websterite (diallage and hypersthene) . Closely allied to this group are the hornblendites, consistingessentially of
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hornblende . The
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term perknite (Gr. lrepsvbs, dark) has also been used to designate the whole series . They are essentially of igneous origin, though some pyroxenites are included in the metamorphic complex of the Lewisian of Scotland; those pyroxene rocks which result from the contact alteration of impure limestones are described as pyroxene hornfelses (calc-silicate hornfelses) . The pyroxenites are closely allied to the gabbros and norites, from which they differ by the absence of felspar, and to the peridotites, which are distinguished from them by containing
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olivine . This connexion is indicated also by their mode of occurrence, for they usually accompany masses of
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gabbro and
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peridotite and seldom are found by themselves . They are strictly plutonic and often very coarse-grained, containing individual crystals which may be several inches in length . The
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principal
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accessory minerals, in addition to olivine and felspar, are
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chromite and spinels, garnet, iron oxides,
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rutile, scapolite . They frequently occur in the form of dikes or segregations in gabbro and peridotite: e.g. in Shetland, Cortlandt on the Hudson
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river, North Carolina (websterite), Baltimore, New Zealand, and in Saxony . The component minerals often have a close resemblance to those of the surrounding rock . By decomposition the rocks consisting of pyroxene pass into serpentines, which sometimes preserve the
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original structures of the
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primary minerals, such as the lamination of hypersthene and the rectangular cleavage of augite .

Under pressure-

metamorphism hornblende is
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developed and various types of
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amphibolite and hornblende-schist are produced . Occasionally rocks rich in pyroxene are found as basic facies of
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nepheline
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syenite; a good example is provided by the melanite pyroxenites associated with
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borolanite (q.v.) at Ledbeg in Sutherlandshire . (J . S .

End of Article: PYROXENITE
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PYRRHO OF ELIS (c. 360—270 B.C.)

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