Friday, May 27, 2011

Plagioclase in Yellow Dog peridotite (plagioclase-bearing lherzolite)

Click on image to enlarge.          Photo © Daniel R. Snyder

 Orthopyroxene at upper left (gray), enclosing plagioclase laths; clinopyroxene (magenta) at lower right; olivine at lower left, upper right, and top center. Yellow Dog Plains, Marquette County, northern Michigan. XPL. Imaged area 2.7 mm x 4 mm (2X objective).

This is an unusually rich concentration of plagioclase (center) for the Yellow Dog peridotite. Most of the plagioclase in my samples is scattered as single laths, perhaps two or three small grains in a typical frame this size.  Older geology texts rule out ANY plagioclase if a rock is to be called "peridotite", but the IUGS classification allows up to 10 percent, in which case they are called "plagioclase-bearing ____". However, the consultant's report states that the plagioclase can average 25 to 30 percent "over significant intervals". In order to accommodate this, the consultant uses a maximum of 30% plagioclase for peridotite. The report defines rocks with between 10% and 30% plagioclase as "feldspathic peridotite".  (This report is on the Web. You can get it in PDF format by Googling "Eagle Deposit Geology".) Under the IUGS classification, these rocks would either be olivine gabbro, olivine norite, or olivine gabbronorite.


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