Cathedral Peak Granodiorite megacrysts
After seeing the feldspar megacrysts in Maryland's Ellicott City Granodiorite two days ago, I wanted to share some even more impressive megacrysts, those found on the periphery of the Cathedral Peak Granodiorite pluton ['CPGD'] in California's Sierra Nevada mountains.
Here's a typical look at the CPGD close to its contact with metasedimentary & metavolcanic host rocks. It's chock-full of 3-7 cm crystals of potassium feldspar, set in a more typical-looking granodioritic matrix of sub-0.5 cm crystals:
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This is a nice example of an intrusive porphyry. Not all porphyritic textures result from two phase cooling: The way the story usually goes is that the magma starting underground at a realtively slow rate, then the magma (solid crystals + remaining liquid) gets tapped and erupts, with the rest cooling at a faster rate on the surface. This one clearly shows a phaneritic (coarse-grained) texture throughout; it's just that some crystals grew bigger than others. I'm not an igneous petrologist, so I won't claim to understand why. Enlighten me if you know.
Here is a close-up of one feldspar crystal shows lines of mafic inclusions (earlier-crystallizing minerals like amphibole which were caught up in the advancing front of feldspar crystallization, and trapped in the larger feldspar crystal):
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My mind wants to see this as a spiral pattern, like a snowball garnet, and hence to interpret this as a feldspar crystal rotating as it grew, but that's surely wishful thinking. Especially seeing as how there's no foliation to get wrapped up in the 'rotating' porphyroblast. But... I've never seen another igneous crystal that shows this same pattern. Anyone else? Trick of the light?
Now here's something really wild:
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Recall that when I took these photographs in 2003, I was out in the Sierras looking at the Sierra Crest Shear Zone, a 1-2 kilometer wide zone of smooshed rocks adjacent to the eastern boundary of the Sierra Nevada Batholith. So mainly I was interested in these older "host rocks" which were metavolcanic and metasedimentary, but I was also interested in how they related to the batholith as a whole. In places, I could see clear evidence that the plutons of the batholith were sheared, too, and in other places they appeared to have intruded post-deformation. This photo shows that the Cathedral Peak Granodiorite came along after the bulk of the deformation had happened.
How do we know? (1) It's not especially foliated itself. (2) Here, magma oozed between the foliation layers in the metasedimentary rocks immediately adjacent to the pluton. These layers flexed to allow the magma to intrude; I think of curtains billowing underwater. Then, as the pluton inflated (or as regional deformation continued to squeeze these rocks; or both), a compressive stress was exerted on these mingled layers of foliated rocks and magma. The liquid magma squished out of the way, but the solid megacrysts were trapped, and the foliation flexed and wrapped around them.
Twisted food analogy: Say I make a peanut butter and raisin sandwich. (Seriously, they're good!) I have a piece of bread, and I smear it with a mix of creamy peanut butter and chunky raisins (the giant ones from Trader Joe's). I place another piece of bread on top. Then, because I value my geology more than my manners, I lean over like I'm going to perform CPR, and exert pressure perpendicular to the plane of the bread. The peanut butter, being ductile, squishes out the sides, while the raisins are trapped, and the bread deforms around them.
Such, such are the thoughts of the hungry field geologist...
Here's a typical look at the CPGD close to its contact with metasedimentary & metavolcanic host rocks. It's chock-full of 3-7 cm crystals of potassium feldspar, set in a more typical-looking granodioritic matrix of sub-0.5 cm crystals:
.jpg)
This is a nice example of an intrusive porphyry. Not all porphyritic textures result from two phase cooling: The way the story usually goes is that the magma starting underground at a realtively slow rate, then the magma (solid crystals + remaining liquid) gets tapped and erupts, with the rest cooling at a faster rate on the surface. This one clearly shows a phaneritic (coarse-grained) texture throughout; it's just that some crystals grew bigger than others. I'm not an igneous petrologist, so I won't claim to understand why. Enlighten me if you know.
Here is a close-up of one feldspar crystal shows lines of mafic inclusions (earlier-crystallizing minerals like amphibole which were caught up in the advancing front of feldspar crystallization, and trapped in the larger feldspar crystal):
.jpg)
My mind wants to see this as a spiral pattern, like a snowball garnet, and hence to interpret this as a feldspar crystal rotating as it grew, but that's surely wishful thinking. Especially seeing as how there's no foliation to get wrapped up in the 'rotating' porphyroblast. But... I've never seen another igneous crystal that shows this same pattern. Anyone else? Trick of the light?
Now here's something really wild:
.jpg)
Recall that when I took these photographs in 2003, I was out in the Sierras looking at the Sierra Crest Shear Zone, a 1-2 kilometer wide zone of smooshed rocks adjacent to the eastern boundary of the Sierra Nevada Batholith. So mainly I was interested in these older "host rocks" which were metavolcanic and metasedimentary, but I was also interested in how they related to the batholith as a whole. In places, I could see clear evidence that the plutons of the batholith were sheared, too, and in other places they appeared to have intruded post-deformation. This photo shows that the Cathedral Peak Granodiorite came along after the bulk of the deformation had happened.
How do we know? (1) It's not especially foliated itself. (2) Here, magma oozed between the foliation layers in the metasedimentary rocks immediately adjacent to the pluton. These layers flexed to allow the magma to intrude; I think of curtains billowing underwater. Then, as the pluton inflated (or as regional deformation continued to squeeze these rocks; or both), a compressive stress was exerted on these mingled layers of foliated rocks and magma. The liquid magma squished out of the way, but the solid megacrysts were trapped, and the foliation flexed and wrapped around them.
Twisted food analogy: Say I make a peanut butter and raisin sandwich. (Seriously, they're good!) I have a piece of bread, and I smear it with a mix of creamy peanut butter and chunky raisins (the giant ones from Trader Joe's). I place another piece of bread on top. Then, because I value my geology more than my manners, I lean over like I'm going to perform CPR, and exert pressure perpendicular to the plane of the bread. The peanut butter, being ductile, squishes out the sides, while the raisins are trapped, and the bread deforms around them.
Such, such are the thoughts of the hungry field geologist...
Labels: analogies, california, granite, metamorphism, minerals, primary structures


1 Comments:
Hello Calan, wonderful way to teach geology. I am a retired geology teacher now doing mud logging on wells being drilled for oil and/or gas. From my perspective handsample and outcrop photos are worth more than the proverbial thousand words - they are invaluable when trying to help the non-geologist (driller, company man, tool-pusher etc) understand the rocks I am logging and through which they are drilling. And given how long it has been since most petroleum geologists have been in the field or looked at well cuttings, photos help when talking to them also. Great idea. I have put your blog on my favorites list and will check back often to see what new photos you have posted.
I found your site while looking for pictures and information on granodiorite. There may not be any hydrocarbons in them as igneous plutons but as eroded sediments there sure are. Darryl
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