IC 7550 Economic Importance of Pegmatites

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 60
- File Size:
- 21572 KB
- Publication Date:
- Feb 1, 1950
Abstract
According to Lindgren , the economic importance of pegmatites stems
from the fact that they represent the principal natural storehouse of two
classes of mineral products : (1 ) common minerals in exceptional size and
purity and ( 2 ) several of the rarest minerals , which are not commercially
available from other types of deposits .
Most pegmatites can be described simply as coarse- to very coarsegrained
granites . Pegmatite includes coarse -textured igneous rocks of any
composition , such as syenitic , alkali syenitic , dioritic , or gabbroitic ;
but basic pegmatites are far less common than those that are associated
with acid rocks and correspond approximately to the mineral composition
of ordinary granite . Moreover , only a very few basic pegmatites can be
considered as economic sources of useful minerals .
Whereas , in ordinary granitic rocks the individual minerals usually
measure 1/8 to 1/4 inch across , in pegmatites they are characteristically
over 1 inch and often more than 12 inches in diameter . Although some of
the constituents of the pegmatite may be only a fraction of an inch in
length , single crystals more than 10 feet long are by no means unusual ,
and some crystals are enormous . A whole quarry was operated in the Urals
within a single crystal of feldspar . Huge quartz crystals are quite common
although usually imperfect . Muscovite plates 10 feet in diameter have been
mined in India , and the Purdy mica mine in Canada contained a mica crystal
measuring 6.5 by 9.5 feet and weighing nearly 7 tons , which supplied more
than $20,000 worth of trimmed mica sheet . A loglike crystal of spodumene
in the Etta mine in the Black Hills of South Dakota was 42 feet long .
Giant crystals of beryl weighing several tons apiece have been mined from
several properties .
Because so many rare minerals are found in substantial concentration
only in pegmatites , it is a common fallacy to suppose that pegmatites are
always enriched in rare elements . Traces of most of these elements , of
course , are found in almost all igneous rocks , and they reappear in the
sediments derived from igneous rocks . It does not follow , however , that
all or even most pegmatites contain higher percentages of rare elements
than other granitic rocks . Geological evidence points to the probability
that notable concentrations of rarer minerals or elements in pegmatites
are more or less fortuituous , such additions often being ascribed to events
subsequent to the original emplacement of the main body of the pegmatite .
Most pegmatites consist principally of potash , feldspar , and quartz . Even
mica , although commonly present , is not an essential constituent . Probably
Citation
APA:
(1950) IC 7550 Economic Importance of PegmatitesMLA: IC 7550 Economic Importance of Pegmatites. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.