The Distribution Of The Elements In Igneous Rocks.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Henry S. Washington
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
30
File Size:
1302 KB
Publication Date:
Sep 1, 1908

Abstract

I. INTRODUCTION. DURING the last twenty years or so the chemical investigation of rocks has made great advances, and it is now generally recognized that a knowledge of the chemical composition is as essential as that of the texture or mineral composition-if not more so-for the proper classification of rocks and study of their origin and relationships. Rock-analyses have vastly increased in numbers and, what is of greater importance, in quality. New and improved methods permit of greater accuracy than was possible in the early days, and the list of chemical constituents frequently determined has risen from the seven or eight of the greater part of the nineteenth century to twenty or more. Indeed, rock-analyses with determinations of so many constituents are now commonly made by the chemists of the United States and Australia, while in Germany, Great Britain, France, and Italy the rarer constituents are determined more frequently than formerly. As a consequence of this modern, accurate work, it has been discovered that some elements which were formerly supposed to be rare are of wide-spread occurrence and are often present in considerable amount. The fact is further being developed that the elements tend to show certain relations of occurrence or abundance in connection with each other. This is a fact which is applicable to the rarer elements, and which also finds a broad geological and petrological expression in the recognition of petrographic provinces. We are beginning to obtain some definite, though as yet rudimentary, knowledge of the distribution of the elements among igneous rocks. Some of the results along these lines obtained by study of the vast accumulation of analytical data now available are well known to petrologists, while others do not seem to be so gener-
Citation

APA: Henry S. Washington  (1908)  The Distribution Of The Elements In Igneous Rocks.

MLA: Henry S. Washington The Distribution Of The Elements In Igneous Rocks.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1908.

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