Dougal Jerram

The Field Description of Metamorphic Rocks


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Chapter 3 provides a more detailed and systematic overview of how rock texture and mineralogy change in rocks of various compositions as metamorphic grade increases.

      1.3.2 Subduction zone rocks

Schematic illustration of examples of classic (Barrovian) regional metamorphic rocks.

       (slate photo Jim Talbot, phillite, schist, and gneiss photos Dougal Jerram, migmatite photo Mark Caddick).

Photo depicts (a) Blueschist facies, Syros, Greece (Mark Caddick for scale) with inset figure highlighting lawsonite porphyroblasts, (b) Eclogite facies, Alps.

       (photo a Mark Caddick, photo b Hans Jørgen).

      

      1.3.3 Contact metamorphic rocks

Photo depicts highly folded metamorphic carbonate turbidites, Namibia.

       (photo Dougal Jerram).

Photo depicts contact metamorphism.

       (photo Dougal Jerram).

      A major difference between contact metamorphic rocks and the regional metamorphism discussed here is that contact metamorphism is generally quite static, with far less deformation during mineral growth. This means that the newly formed minerals are not typically as strongly aligned as they are in regional metamorphism, and an irregular orientation of fine grained minerals is typical of a ‘hornfels’, a classically diagnostic rock of relatively high temperatures of contact metamorphism.

      1.3.4 Hydrothermal metamorphic rocks