GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

Similar documents
Last Time. GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy. Polymorphs & Polymorphism. Other Crystal Structures. Other Crystal Structures. This Week s Agenda

GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

GEOLOGY 333 LAB 5. Light Mechanics

GY-343 Petrology Petrographic Microscope Laboratory

ESS 439 Lab 2 Examine Optical Properties of Minerals

Optical Mineralogy in a Nutshell

Biaxial Minerals This document last updated on 27-Oct-2014

INTRODUCTION TO THE PETROGRAPHIC MICROSCOPE AND RELIEF, BECKE LINE, AND OBLIQUE ILLUMINATION

ESS 439 Igneous Petrology/Optical Mineralogy

EESC 4701: Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology IGNEOUS MINERALS LAB 1 HANDOUT

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Objectives of this Lab. Introduction. The Petrographic Microscope

LAB 1: OPTICAL PROPERTIES AND THE PLM #1 Orthoscopic Light

Geol 5310 (Spr 09) Lab 1 Review of Optical Mineralogy (9/9/09) Due Date: Wed., September 16.

Optical Mineralogy. Optical Mineralogy. Use of the petrographic microscope

Earth Materials II Review Optical Mineralogy and Igneous Minerals

Igneous petrology EOSC 321

This Lab will not be marked so make sure to get anything you are unsure about checked by your TA!

GY 111: Physical Geology

Igneous petrology EOSC 321

GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

LAB 3: COMMON MINERALS IN SEDIMENTARY ROCKS, Part 1

GEOL Lab 11 (Metamorphic Rocks in Hand Sample and Thin Section)

OLIVINES, PYROXENES, AND AMPHIBOLES PLEOCHROISM, INTERFERENCE COLORS AND EXTINCTION ANGLES

Laboratory 7: Alkaline rocks

Igneous petrology EOSC 321

Igneous petrology EOSC 321 Laboratory 1: Ultramafic plutonic and volcanic rocks

Name Petrology Spring 2006 Igneous rocks lab Part II Hand samples of igneous rocks Due Tuesday 3/7

Mineral Properties and Identification

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Symmetry. 2-D Symmetry. 2-D Symmetry. Symmetry. EESC 2100: Mineralogy 1. Symmetry Elements 1. Rotation. Symmetry Elements 1. Rotation.

Physical Geology 101 Laboratory MINERALS II Silicate and Carbonate Rock-Forming Minerals

INTRODUCTION ROCK COLOR

Quiz Five (9:30-9:35 AM)

Quiz Four (9:30-9:35 AM)

Uniaxial Minerals Descriptions

Igneous petrology EOSC 321 Laboratory 8: Intermediate and Felsic Volcanic Rocks. Pyroclastic Rocks

Lab 3: Minerals and the rock cycle. Rocks are divided into three major categories on the basis of their origin:

Name Petrology Spring 2006

Feldspars. Structure. The feldspars are by far the most abundant group of minerals and are found in igneous, metamorphic and many sedimentary rocks.

The Application of Polarized Light Microscopy to Identify Minerals A Preliminary Study of Forensic Geology

GY 111: Physical Geology

Quiz Three (9:30-9:35 AM)

GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

And the study of mineral the branch in geology is termed as mineralogy. (Refer Slide Time: 0:29)

GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

The Study of Minerals (Chapter 1) Introduction to Mineral Identification THE SILICATE MINERALS

LAB 5: COMMON MINERALS IN IGNEOUS ROCKS

How 2 nd half labs will work

Tektosilicates- Feldspar Group Min XIVa

Physics I Keystone Institute Technology & Management Unit-II

Quiz Three (2:00 to 2:05 PM)

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Fun with Asbestos 1. Table 1: Asbestos Minerals. Mineral Asbestos Variety Mineral Group Comments. monoclinic amphibole. monoclinic amphibole

TCNJ Physics 120 Introduction to Geology

Name. GEOL.3250 Geology for Engineers Igneous Rocks

Mineral/feature Modal% Size, morphology, distinguishing optical properties

Hashemite University Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment Department of earth and environmental sciences. Lab1: Mineral Physical Properties

LAB 6: COMMON MINERALS IN IGNEOUS ROCKS

Physical Geology 101 Laboratory MINERALS I Properties, Classification and Identification

GY 112L: Earth History

GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy

Advanced Igneous petrology EOSC 530 Laboratory 1: Mantle Xenoliths

402: Sedimentary Petrology

Pyroxene, amphibole, and feldspar

UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. College of Science and Engineering School of GeoSciences. Earth Materials UO4824 DEGREE EXAMINATION (MOCK) xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Quiz Seven (2:00 to 2:02 PM)

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

2. Can you name any minerals? (Diamonds, quartz, salt, asbestos, sulfur, copper)

WELCOME TO GEOLOGY 333

Lecture 3: Earth Materials and their Properties I: Minerals. Introduction to the Earth System EAS 2200

Closed Notes - 15 points

PETROGRAPHIC CHARACTERIZATION OF PAINTED ENEOLITHIC CERAMICS

LAB 2: SILICATE MINERALS

GY 111 Lecture Notes Metamorphism 2: Regional Metamorphism

OCEAN/ESS 410. Lab 8. Igneous rocks

Minerals: Minerals: Building blocks of rocks. Atomic Structure of Matter. Building Blocks of Rocks Chapter 3 Outline

Table 7.1 Mineralogy of metamorphic rocks related to protolith and grade

Chapter - IV PETROGRAPHY. Petrographic studies are an integral part of any structural or petrological studies in

Minerals II: Physical Properties and Crystal Forms. From:

Lecture Outlines PowerPoint. Chapter 2 Earth Science 11e Tarbuck/Lutgens

GEOL FORENSIC GEOLOGY ROCK IDENTIFICATION

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

GY 112L: Earth History Lab

GY 112L Earth History

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Composition of the Earth: Minerals and Rocks

GY 111: Physical Geology

Characterization of Montana Grow Product David Mogk January 16, 2014

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Modern Optics Prof. Partha Roy Chaudhuri Department of Physics Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur

Lab 4: Mineral Identification April 14, 2009

GY 111: Physical Geology

Earth Science 232 Petrography

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Hand specimen descriptions of igneous rocks

ENVI.2030L Rock Identification

Earth Materials GEOL 110

Transcription:

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH ALABAMA GY 302: Crystallography & Mineralogy Lecture 7b: Optical Mineralogy Instructor: Dr. Douglas Haywick

Last Time 1. Properties of light 2. Minerals and light transmission

Light Light is a propagating wave front that moves fast. The velocity of light in a vacuum is one of the most important constants in science: V c = 2.988 x 10 8 m/s (this constant is usually designated C)

Light When light travels from one medium to another (vacuum to air, air to water), interesting refraction effects occur. The Index of Refraction (n) of a material is a ratio of C to the speed of light through a material (V x ). n x = C/V x http://www.mineralatlas.com/optical%20crystallography/relief.jpg

Light In order to do petrography, you need to restrict the light that passes through your mineral specimens to waves that vibrate in a single direction. This is done with the help of a polarizing lens: Source: Olympus Microscopes

Minerals and Light There are 3 optical classes of minerals: A) Transparent (minerals that transmit light and images) B) Translucent (minerals that only transmit light) C) Opaque (minerals that do not transmit light at all) Optical microscopy/thin-section petrography studies transparent and translucent minerals. The vast majority of minerals fall within these classes. Even minerals that you might at first think are opaque (pyroxene, biotite) are translucent if they are sliced thinly enough.

Minerals and Light All isometric minerals are isotopic. All other minerals are termed anisotropic Source: www.iit.edu

Minerals and Light In order to better visualize how light travels through minerals, geologists came up with the concept of the indicatrix. The indicatrix is an imaginary object that is defined by the indices of refraction. For isotropic minerals, it is spherical. For anisotropic minerals, it is an ellipsoid.

Optical Mineralogy Identification of rocks and minerals in hand specimen is one of the important skills that all geology students need to learn. But even the best geologists are limited in the number of substances that they can ID. Enter microscopy many characteristics that are apparent in hand specimen can be more diagnostic at microscopic scales.

Today s Agenda 1. Minerals properties under PPL (Plane polarized light) 2. Mineral properties under XN (crossed Nichols/polars)

The Petrographic Microscope Know your enemy!

The Petrographic Microscope Know your enemy!

The Petrographic Microscope Know your enemy!

The Petrographic Microscope Know your thin-section!

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 1) Colour: Most minerals are colourless under PPL, but some minerals are intensely coloured. As a general rule, dark coloured minerals in hand specimen (e.g., pyroxene, amphibole, biotite etc.), are coloured in PPL. Light coloured minerals (quartz, fluorite, feldspars, muscovite etc.) are colourless. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. This is an interesting phenomenon where anisotropic minerals appear to change colour as they are rotated in PPL. It has to do with variable indices of refraction and is related to the crystal class of the minerals. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. This is an interesting phenomenon where anisotropic minerals appear to change colour as they are rotated in PPL. It has to do with variable indices of refraction and is related to the crystal class of the minerals. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. This is an interesting phenomenon where anisotropic minerals appear to change colour as they are rotated in PPL. It has to do with variable indices of refraction and is related to the crystal class of the minerals. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. This is an interesting phenomenon where anisotropic minerals appear to change colour as they are rotated in PPL. It has to do with variable indices of refraction and is related to the crystal class of the minerals. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. This is an interesting phenomenon where anisotropic minerals appear to change colour as they are rotated in PPL. It has to do with variable indices of refraction and is related to the crystal class of the minerals. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 2) Pleochroism. Orientation is important!

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 3) Cleavage. Same property as seen in hand specimen, but you are now looking at 2 dimensional slices. http://www.union.edu/public/geodept/courses/petrology/ig_minerals.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 3) Cleavage. The only time that you will see more than one cleavage direction is when you are looking down the c axis of the crystal. http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/petrolgy/tsecplp.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 4) Relief: the ratio of the index of refraction of a mineral to the index of refraction of the material immediately adjacent to it (usually glass). http://www.brocku.ca/earthsciences/people/gfinn/optical/relief1.jpg http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/petrolgy/tsecplp.htm

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) The Becke Line Test tells you if the index of refraction of a mineral is higher or lower than the medium it is immersed in (usually oils). The Becke Line is a bright band of light that forms at the edge of crystals due to and edge effect. High n Low n Lower stage "Becke Line in, crystal high. Becke Line out, crystal low".

A: Plane-polarized Light (PPL) 5) Crystallinity. A crystal with sharp, geometric edges is said to be euhedral. One that has rounded edges (e.g., water abraded) is said to be anhedral. http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/petrolgy/tsecplp.htm

B: Crossed Nichols (XN)

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 6) Extinction: occurs when the indicatrix aligns up with the polars and the entire crystal goes black (extinct). PPL XN

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 6) Extinction: For some minerals, extinction occurs in a sharp or sudden fashion (straight or unit extinction). In some minerals, it is more like a curtain effect where part of the crystal fades out while other parts do not (strained extinction). Many minerals go extinct when the cleavage directions are parallel to polars (parallel extinction). Others go extinct when the cleavage is inclined relative to polars (inclined extinction).

B: Crossed Nichols (XN)

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 7) Birefringence. This is the most important property of minerals under crossed polars. It is defined as the difference between the index of refraction of the minimum and maximum refractive indices of a mineral. For uniaxial minerals; n o n e or n e - n o. For biaxial crystals; n a n c or n c - n a. As far as you are concerned, you see pretty colours under XN

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 7) Birefringence. This is the most important property of minerals under crossed polars. It is defined as the difference between the index of refraction of the minimum and maximum refractive indices of a mineral. PPL

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 7) Birefringence. This is the most important property of minerals under crossed polars. It is defined as the difference between the index of refraction of the minimum and maximum refractive indices of a mineral. PPL XN

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 7) Birefringence. This is the most important property of minerals under crossed polars. It is defined as the difference between the index of refraction of the minimum and maximum refractive indices of a mineral.

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 8) Optical Twinning. Same thing as physical twins whereby two or more crystals of a single mineral grow together in a mathematically predicable pattern (involves twin planes, twin axes etc).

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) Optical twins are slightly out of phase with one another. As you rotate the stage, one section goes extinct before the other does. PPL XN

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) Plagioclase feldspar exhibits polysynthetic twinning (resembles prison stripes). Microcline feldspar exhibits tartan twinning (resembles the plaid of a Scottish kilt). Orthoclase displays Carlsbad twinning (not as prominent as the other feldspars).

B: Crossed Nichols (XN) 9) Zonation. Some minerals change their composition has they grow, particularly those that that form continuous series through solid solution during igneous processes (e.g., olivine, plagioclase). This can result in optical zonation. PPL XN

Today s Stuff To Do 1. Take home Lecture test 1 (due next Tuesday; 11:00 AM) NO ONLINE LECTURE THIS WEEK Next Week 1. Thin Section microscopy in the Lab 2. Quiz 3 (last one; monoclinic and triclinic models) 3. Mineralogy lectures begin

GY 302: Crystallography and Mineralogy Lecture 7b: Optical Mineralogy Part 2 Instructor: Dr. Doug Haywick dhaywick@southalabama.edu This is a free open access lecture, but not for commercial purposes. For personal use only.