Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Petrology trip #4: Mineral Hill

Done with the Cockeysville Marble and fortified with chocolate malts from the Twin Kiss, we ventured on to "Mineral Hill," interpreted as a paleo-black-smoker site from the deep Iapetus. This is a zone of mafic and ultramafic rocks that have been metamorphosed and also mineralized with a suite of sulfide minerals, including pyrite, chalcopyrite, bornite, covellite, and carrollite (in fact, this is the type locality for carrollite). Presumably it was a SedEx-type deposit in the Iapetus Ocean basin. It is geographically associated with the Baltimore Mafic Complex, which is most readily interpreted as a dismembered slice of the Iapetus oceanic lithosphere (that is, an ophiolite). As the Iapetus closed during the Taconian Orogeny, it was accreted to North America and metamorphosed.

The petrology students start picking up pieces from the massive pile of tailings in search of treasures:
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Talc shist (soapstone) with malachite:
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More of the same:
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I forget what this one was, but I loved the "spray" pattern of its bladed crystals:
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Chrysotile asbestos:
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Pyrite:
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And lots and lots of magnetite! These are some of my refrigerator magnets stuck to it:
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One more stop to go: the Ellicott City Granodiorite...

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2 Comments:

Blogger Lockwood said...

Oooh! Spectacular stuff. Is there any bedrock to look at? Also, loved the Sed-Ex parody, especially the part about dissolving several lead sinkers and some of Mom's jewelry.

May 6, 2009 4:55 PM  
Blogger Callan Bentley said...

Hi Lockwood,

There's serpentenite and schist (w/whopper garnets) exposed nearby on the shores of the Liberty Reservoir, but not right atop the summit of Mineral Hill.

Glad you appreciated your time with Red Dog!

C

May 7, 2009 6:47 AM  

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