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Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
Locality: road-cut on north shore of Loch Laxford
Granite, Lewisian Complex, Loch Laxford
Coarse-grained pink granite crystallized from acid magma
intruded in sheet-like bodies into grey gneisses. Here we
see the contact between pink granite and banded grey
gneiss. The contact cuts across the banding in the gneiss
at a small angle, and an offshoot of the granite forms a
vein that cuts across the banding at a high angle.
Granite, Lewisian Complex, Loch Laxford
This cut surface of a hand specimen shows the typical
minerals of a granite. There are two varieties of feldspar:
potassium feldspar is pink in colour, sodium feldspar is
white. Quartz is glassy and transparent, appearing grey in
hand specimen. These three minerals make up more than 95%
of the rock Small amounts of black minerals are present:
these are magnetite (iron oxide) and biotite (dark mica).
The texture consists of interlocking crystals up to 1 cm
across. Although in many granites the larger feldspars may
show regular blocky shapes, in this one they are mostly
more rounded.
Granite, Lewisian Complex, Loch Laxford
In thin section the major minerals of the granite are
colourless and show little contrast. Plagioclase (sodium
feldspar) shows some alteration to dusty-looking material,
and so can be distinguished in part from potassium feldspar
and quartz. The opaque (black) mineral at top left is
magnetite.
Plane polarized light, field of view 6 mm across
Granite, Lewisian Complex, Loch Laxford
The minerals of a granite are more easily distinguished
with crossed polars. Quartz is clear and evenly
illuminated, but the feldspars show striped and "tartan"
patterns that result from twinning (systematic changes in
orientation) in the crystal lattice. The "tartan" pattern
is characteristic of potassium feldspar.
Crossed polars, field of view 6 mm across
Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
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D.J. Waters, Department of Earth Sciences, May 2003