Classification Of The Zeolite Deposits Of The Western United States ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. J. Rergis
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
1108 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

During the past ten years a number of papers have appeared describing zeolite occurrences in the western United States in Mesozoic sedimentary rocks, altered bedded Tertiary pyroclastics, playa lakes, hot springs, and amygdaloidal basalts. With the emergence of natural zeolites as economic industrial minerals it appears, useful to develop a system of classification to delineate those zeolite deposits of economic interest which were not discovered until the middle 1950's. The first attempt at a classification of naturally occurring zeolites was made in 1914 by Lindgren l when he classified the zeolites into eleven groups based on their mode of occurrence. The zoned zeolites in the Mesozoic rocks of New Zealand and elsewhere were classified according to the mineral assemblages by Fyfe, et al.2 in 1958 as a zeolite facies corresponding to low grade regional metamorphism. In 1966, Hay suggested as an alternative to the preceding classification one which would "classify as diagenetic all mineral assemblages produced in sedimentary rocks under conditions in which zeolites are formed." In this paper a classification is proposed with the objective of providing an overall perspective of the zeolite occurrences in the western United States.
Citation

APA: A. J. Rergis  (1967)  Classification Of The Zeolite Deposits Of The Western United States ? Introduction

MLA: A. J. Rergis Classification Of The Zeolite Deposits Of The Western United States ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1967.

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