Resorption as an Agent in Freeing Hematite from the Grenville Granite Magma

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
George W. Bain
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
14
File Size:
3555 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

The area in Quebec immediately north of the Ottawa river is underlain by a large area of granite gneiss intruded in lit-par-lit fashion into Grenville sediments and low silica intrusives of the Buckingham Series. This complex of metamorphic rocks is intruded by a much later magma found, chiefly, as a very large stock about 20 miles in diameter and extending from Brownsburg to Grenville, and as dykes and small outliers at various places adjacent to its outer margin. 1A similar stock at Rigaud, Quebec, is situated south of the Ottawa river and has been described by O. E. Le Roy. The earliest representatives of the later magma are a series of granodiorite dykes characterized by abundant hornblende, along with primary magnetite and subordinate sulphides scattered as roundish grains through anorthoclase and aligoclase feldspars and subordinate quartz. The rock is found as narrow dykes and shows no prominent secondary structures, either in the field or in thin sections under the microscope.
Citation

APA: George W. Bain  (1926)  Resorption as an Agent in Freeing Hematite from the Grenville Granite Magma

MLA: George W. Bain Resorption as an Agent in Freeing Hematite from the Grenville Granite Magma. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1926.

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