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Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
Ledmore North quarry
Complex banded marble, metamorphosed Durness Limestone,
Ledmore
The yellow-green bands are rich in serpentine.
Forsterite marble, metamorphosed Durness Limestone,
Ledmore
Forsterite is magnesium silicate, the pure variety of the
mineral olivine. It is colourless, so it cannot be
distinguished from the white calcite of the marble.
However, if water gets in as the rock cools, it breaks down
to serpentine, which has a characteristic yellow-green
colour seen here in certain bands and fractures.
Forsterite marble, metamorphosed Durness
Limestone, Ledmore
The forsterite is in cracked round grains set in
dusty-looking calcite. The Durness limestone was originally
made of dolomite, calcium magnesium carbonate. Where it
also contains silica, a chemical reaction can occur during
metamorphism to make magnesium silicate (forsterite) plus
calcium carbonate (calcite).
Plane polarized light. Field of view 6 mm across
Forsterite marble, metamorphosed Durness
Limestone, Ledmore
The rounded grains of forsterite show up in bright colours
agains a background of pearly speckled calcite.
Crossed polars. Field of view 6 mm across
Scourie | Achmelvich | Laxford | Clachtoll | Stoer | Assynt | Skiag Bridge | Glencoul | Knockan | Borralan | Ledmore |
Home | Geological History | Stratigraphy | Area map | Rock Index | About |
D.J. Waters, Department of Earth Sciences, May 2003