• Title/Summary/Keyword: back-scattered electron (BSE) images

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Intergrowth of Biotite and Chlorite in an Amphibolitic Schist: Prograde or Retrograde Reaction\ulcorner (각섬암에서 관찰된 흑운모와 녹니석의 협재 조직: 전진 또는 후퇴변성작용에 의한 것인가\ulcorner)

  • 안중호;조문섭
    • Journal of the Mineralogical Society of Korea
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.66-76
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    • 1999
  • Intergrowth texture of biotite and chlorite crystals within an amphibolitic schist of the northwestern Okchon metamorphic belt was investigated using back-scattered electron (BSE) imaging and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). BSE images show that thin chlorite and biotite packets are mixed along (001) plane to result in intergrowth texture. In addition, rutile particles of submicron size occur exclusively at the boundaries between biotite and chlorite stacks. HRTEM investigation and remnant biotite layers are closely associated with such boundaries, suggestinga possibility that chlorite layers were formed from biotite during retrograde metamorphic reaction. Such intepretation of the origin of intergrowth texture can be further supported biotite is approximately 2 w%, and that of chlorite usually lower than 0.2 wt%. Ti was apparently leached out during the alteratin of biotite to precipitate rutile particles at the such rutile particles could be an important indicator showing that the intergrowth texture of chlorite and biotite is originated by a retrograde metamorphism rather than by incomplete chlorite-to-biotite reaction during prograde metamorphism. Biotite crystals contain intercalated chlorite layers will result in somewhat high Mg and Al, and the use of such inhomogeneous biotite will result in impreciese geothermobarometric calculations.

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Alteration Textures and Mineral Chemistry of Margarite from Miwon Area, Chungcheongbukdo (충북미원지역에서 산출하는 마카라이트의 변질양상 및 광물화학)

  • 이승준;안중호;김현철;조문섭
    • Journal of the Mineralogical Society of Korea
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.69-77
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    • 2002
  • Margarite, which occurs in the Unkyori Formation of Miwon area, Chungcheongbukdo, South Korea, was investigated using the petrographic microscope, back-scattered electron images (BSEI), and electron probe microanalyzer (EPMA) to characterize the alteration textures and mineral chemistries. Most margarite crystals are inhomogeneous, and chlorite was commonly observed to occur at the boundaries parallel to the rim of margarite. Cracks occur across the basal plane of the margarite, and margarite is partly replaced by chlorite along the cracks. In additon, muscovite and biotite are intergrown in margarite and chlorite crystals, suggesting that margarite was partially altered to chlorite as well as to muscovite and biotite. Chemical analysis data show that paragonite solid solution in the margarite is approximately 19.6 mol%, but clintonite solid solution is negligible. Margarite crystals in the Unkyori Formation cut or penetrate other metamorphic minerals In the same thin sections and are oriented randomly without any relationship with the foliation of host rocks, indicating that formed as a secondary mineral after peak metamorphism. Furthermore, it seems that hydrothermal fluids associated with the Mesozoic intrusions developed near the sample are closely related to the margarite formation.

Albitization of feldspar in the Cretaceous Kusandong Tuff, Korea (백악기 구산동응회암 내 장석의 알바이트화 작용)

  • Jeong, Jong-Ok;Sohn, Young-Kwan
    • The Journal of the Petrological Society of Korea
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    • v.14 no.4 s.42
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    • pp.195-211
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    • 2005
  • The Kusandong Tuff, known as a representative key bed in the Cretaceous Gyeongsang Basin, is a crystal-rich tuff of pyroclastic flow and surge origin. It is 1-4 m thick and laterally extends for more than 200 km intercalated in the upper part of the Hayang Croup. Observations and analyses of the feldspar crystals in the tuff, using polarizing microscopes, EPMA, and BSE images, reveal that the plagioclase crystals in the tuff were completely albitized (>$97\%$ Ab) whereas those in the southernmost localities where the tuff is rich in fine ash matrix are unaltered or partly albitized. K-feldspars are partly albitized at all localities, irrespective of the matrix content of the tuff, Perthitic textures, chessboard twinning, albitization along micro-fractures and cleavages, and the relationship between matrix content and the degree of albitization suggest that feldspars in the Kusandong Tuff were albitized by Na-rich fluid after burial. Albitization is interpreted to start preferentially along micro-fractures and cleavages and be hampered in matrix-rich tuffs with a low permeability. Original composition of the plagioclases in the Kusandong Tuff is also interpreted to have ranged between oligoclase and andesine ($Ab_{62.5}-Ab_{83.3}$) before the albitization.

Shock Metamorphism of Plagioclase-maskelynite in the Lunar Meteorite Mount DeWitt 12007 (달운석 Mount DeWitt 12007의 마스컬리나이트 충격 변성 특성 연구)

  • Kim, Hyun Na;Park, Changkun
    • Journal of the Mineralogical Society of Korea
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    • v.29 no.3
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    • pp.131-139
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    • 2016
  • Detailed knowledge on maskelynite, a glassy phase of plagioclase found in shocked meteorites and impact craters, is essential to understand a shock metamorphism. Here, we explore an inhomogeneous shock metamorphism in the lunar meteorite Mount DeWitt (DEW) 12007 with an aim to understand the formation mechanism of maskelynite. Most plagioclase grains in the DEW 12007 partially amorphized into maskelynite with a unidirectional orientation. Back-scattered electron (BSE) images of maskelynite show a remnant of planar deformation fracture possibly indicating that the maskelynite would be formed by solid-state transformation(i.e., diaplectic glass). Plagioclase with flow texture is also observed along the rim of maskelynite, which would be a result of recrystallization of melted plagioclase. Results of Raman experiments suggest that shock pressure for plagioclase and maskelynite in the DEW 12007 is approximately 5-32 GPa and 26-45 GPa, respectively. The difference in shock pressures between plagioclase and maskelynite can be originated from 1) external factors such as inhomogeneous shock pressure and/or 2) internal factors such as chemical composition and porosity of rock. Unfortunately, Raman spectroscopy has a limitation in revealing the detailed atomic structure of maskelynite such as development of six- or five-coordinated aluminum atom upon various shock pressure. Further studies using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy are necessary to understand the formation mechanism of maskelynite under high pressure.