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From scree material at the roadside on the north shore of Loch Borralan.
Quartz syenite, Loch Borralan Igneous Complex
This pale creamy-pink rock is made up mostly of potassium
feldspar, with a little quartz. If it had a somewhat higher
proportion of quartz, it would be a granite. It has the
typical texture of a slowly-cooled igneous rock, with
interlocking regular-shaped feldspar crystals.
Quartz syenite, Loch Borralan Igneous Complex
This view of the cut surface of the sample shows the
igneous texture of blocky interlocking tablets of pink
feldspar. Greyish-white quartz fiills the more irregular
spaces between feldspar crystals.
Quartz syenite, Loch Borralan Igneous
Complex
The potassium feldspar appears dusty in thin section (this
dust is what imparts the pink colour in the specimen).
Clearer quartz occupies the spaces betwen the feldspars.
Plane polarized light, field of view 6 mm across
Quartz syenite, Loch Borralan Igneous
Complex
Between crossed polars the individual feldspar crystals
are easily distinguished. The texture also gives the
impression of a sequence of crystallization from the melt
as the magma cooled. The larger feldspars (e.g. at left and
right) formed first, and the magma in the spaces betwen
them finally crystallized to an interlocking aggregate of
smaller crystals of feldspar and quartz (centre).
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