Pegmatite

views updated May 18 2018

Pegmatite

A pegmatite is an intrusive igneous body of highly variable grain size that often includes coarse crystal growth. A pegmatite may be a segregation within an associated plutonic rock or a dike or vein that intrudes the surrounding country rock .

The composition range of pegmatites is similar to that of other intrusive igneous rocks and is indicated by using modifier, e.g., granite pegmatite or gabbro pegmatite. However, pegmatites occur most commonly in granites and the term applied alone usually refers to a granitic composition. The mineralogy of pegmatites can be simple or exotic. A simple granite pegmatite may contain only quartz, feldspar , and mica. More complex pegmatites are often zoned and can contain minerals like tourmaline, garnet, beryl, fluorite, lepidolite, spodumene, apatite, and topaz.

Pegmatites are formed as part of the cooling and crystallization process of intrusive rocks. As the parent body begins to cool, a sequential crystallization process occurs that concentrates many volatile constituents such as H2O, boron, fluorine, chlorine, and phosphorous in a residual magma . In simple cases, the presence of residual water has simply allowed the magma to cool slowly enough to permit coarse crystal growth. More complex pegmatites are the result of the presence of numerous exotic volatiles that are eventually incorporated into rare minerals.

The most distinguishing characteristic of pegmatites is the unusually large crystal size of the minerals, which ranges from less than an inch to several feet. Single crystals of spodumene from the Black Hills have reached 40 ft (12 m) in length. A Maine pegmatite contained a beryl crystal 27 ft (8 m) long and 6 ft (1.8 m) wide. These exceptionally large crystals are not free-growing, rather they are intergrown with the rest of the pegmatite. However, pegmatites do produce large and beautiful individual crystals of many different minerals that are highly prized by gem and mineral collectors.

Pegmatites are also valued for the suite of rare elements that tend to be concentrated in the residual magmas. For example, beryllium is obtained from beryl, lithium from spodumene and lepidolite, and boron from tourmaline. Other rare elements obtained from pegmatites include tin, tantalum, and niobium.

See also Intrusive cooling; Pluton and plutonic bodies

pegmatite

views updated May 08 2018

pegmatite Very coarse-grained, igneous rock, usually of granitic composition, in which the individual crystals are at least 2.5 cm long. The crystals are often more than 1 m in length, and may be far larger. Crystallization occurs at a late stage, when the magma is enriched in volatiles and trace elements. Pegmatites may concentrate some rare elements (lithium, boron, fluorine, tantalum, niobium, rare earth elements, and uranium) to economic proportions.

pegmatite

views updated May 14 2018

pegmatite In geology, any very coarsegrained rock, generally light in colour, and often of granitic composition. Pegmatites are the chief sources of gemstones, mica, and feldspar.

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