IC 6268 The Branite Industry Dimension Stone

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 695 KB
- Publication Date:
- May 1, 1930
Abstract
Granites are classed as igneous rocks ; they have been formed by the solidification
of rock magmas or solutions from deep within the earth . It is an almost invariable law of
nature that magmas which cool quickly form fine- grained or glassy rocks , while those that
cool slowly are completely crystallized and are coarser- grained . Granites , being of the
latter class , are regarded as having attained their solid form at considerable depth below
the surface under conditions of high temperature and pressure . The constituent minerals
crystallized out slowly , the crystals interlocking with one another . The great depth of
overlying rocks that must have been present when crystallization took place has been removed
by erosion over large areas on the surface of the earth , in consequence of which granites
appear at or near the surface in many localities . The chief minerals of which granites are formed are feldspars , quartz , and either
mica or hornblende . All the essential constituents except mica are as hard as , or harder
than steel , therefore granites are difficult rocks to cut and dress . Granites are usually
red , pink , or gray , depending on the color of the feldspars . If hornblende or black mica
is abundant the rock may be dark green or almost black .
Granites are characterized by massive homogeneous texture . They are classified as
fine- grained , medium- grained , or coarse - grained . Medium- grained granites are those in which
the feldspar crystals average about one- fourth inch in diameter . If relatively coarsegrained
crystals appear in a fine -grained ground mass the rock is designated a porphyritic
granite . Uniformity in texture and grain size are desirable in building and ornamental
stone , although occasionally rocks of variable texture , such as the porphyritic granites ,
are used . A rock may have the mineral constituents of a granite but show a banded or platy
structure due to recrystallization , folding , or other changes while the rock was in a plastic
or semimolten condition . Such metamorphic rocks are called granite gneisses . They are
used occasionally for building purposes but not as commonly as the uniformly textured
granites .
- Granites are named from the most abundant mineral other than quartz and feldspar
that they contain , being called , for example , biotite granite or hornblende granite . -
Commercially other igneous rocks granitoid in texture but more properly classified
as syenites , diorites , or gabbros may be classed as granites . Thus the " black granite "
of Little Falls , Minn . , is a diorite , and the " black granite " of Eastern Pennsylvania consists
of diabase or gabbro .
The question is sometimes raised as to the depth to which a granite occurrence
may extend . In this respect granites differ notably from limestones , sandstones , or other
sedimentary rocks . The sediments were originally laid down in relatively thin beds , and
individual formations providing rock of economic value may be quite limited in thickness .
Usually the usable beds range between 40 and 200 feet in thickness . On the other hand ,
granite comes up from below . Its depth is unknown , but in general is very great . It may
even be measurable in miles . The reserves of material at depth are to be measured , therefore
, by the economic depth of working rather than by the vertical extent of the rock mass .
Exceptionally , granites of commercial quality may occur in sills or sheets of limited thickness
flanked on either side by rocks of different character , as , for example , at Westerly ,
R. I.
Citation
APA:
(1930) IC 6268 The Branite Industry Dimension StoneMLA: IC 6268 The Branite Industry Dimension Stone. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1930.