Saturday, September 19, 2009

Slickensides within the Purcell Sill

On our hike to Grinnell Glacier this past July in Glacier National Park, I found lots of cool cobbles of float, mainly of the Mesoproterozoic metasedimentary rocks that make up the bulk of the park: the Belt Supergroup. One of these formations, the Helena Formation, is intruded by a diorite sill known as the Purcell Sill. It's a prominent rock unit showing up as a black stripe within the lighter-colored Helena Formation, exposed high on the glaciated walls throughout the park. Occasionally, you'll find pieces of it as float, and I noticed that the higher we climbed up, the more of it we saw. Here's one of my favorites among these pieces of the Purcell Sill:
Glacier_NP_slickensides

This cobble shows beautiful slickenlines, small gouges into the rock as neighboring rock ground across its surface, along a fault. These physical gouges are decorated with a chemical accoutrement: the metamorphic* mineral epidote, which is a gorgeous grassy green.

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