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Locality: Scouriemore peninsula, Scourie
Ultramafic gneiss, Lewisian Gneiss Complex, Scouriemore
The ultramafic gneiss is a rather uniform dark
greenish-grey rock, with a layering that reveals itself as
small ridges of harder and softer rock, seen here dipping
steeply to the left. Ultramafic rocks are made up almost
entirely of dark, mafic minerals, typically magnesium
silicates such as olivine and pyroxene. Most of the Earth's
mantle is made of ultramafic rock.
Ultramafic gneiss, Lewisian Gneiss Complex, Scouriemore
This photograph shows the layering in the ultramafic
gneiss in more detail. Softer layers contain a greater
proportion of olivine, while the harder layers contain
mostly pyroxene. This was originally an igneous rock,
formed when olivine and pyroxene crystals settled out of a
magma. Later it was deformed and metamorphosed into a
gneiss.
Ultramafic gneiss, Lewisian Gneiss Complex, Scouriemore
This ultramafic rock consists entirely of mafic minerals.
The hand specimen has a weathered surface (upper right)
that shows an overall yellowish-brown colour with grey
mineral grains standing out in relief. The yellowish colour
comes from the weathering of olivine; the darker minerals
are mostly pyroxene. The broken surface of the specimen
(lower left) shows that all the minerals are dark coloured
on a fresh surface. The rock is a gneiss because it shows
alternating bands a few cm thick of different proportions
of minerals - the banding is too coarse to be obvious in
this hand specimen.
Ultramafic gneiss, Lewisian Gneiss Complex,
Scouriemore
The dominant mafic minerals can be seen in this view.
Olivine is colourless, with black-outlined fractures.
Pyroxene is of two kinds, showing here in pale pink and
very pale green. Hornblende is pale olive-green. The black
mineral is an opaque oxide.
Plane polarized light, field of view 6 mm across
Ultramafic gneiss, Lewisian Gneiss Complex,
Scouriemore
The bright colours in this view are mostly shown by
olivine (centre). The larger crystals are mostly pyroxene
with some hornblende.
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