METAMORPHISM

in geology, process of change in the structure, texture, or composition of rocks caused by agents of heat, deforming pressure, shearing stress, hot, chemically active fluids, or a combination of these, acting while the rock being changed remains essentially in the solid state. Theoretically, rocks are formed when their constituents are in equilibrium with ambient physical conditions. If the conditions are changed by movements in the earth's crust or by igneous activity, metamorphism occurs to reestablish equilibrium and changes the physical character of the rock mass.

Characteristics of Metamorphism

In general, a metamorphic rock is coarser and has a higher density and lower porosity than the rock from which it was formed. Under low grade metamorphic conditions, the original rocks may only compact, as in the formation of slate from shale. High grade metamorphism changes the rock so completely that the source rock often cannot be readily identified.

Foliation

Alteration of rock texture by metamorphism commonly results in a rearrangement of mineral particles into a parallel alignment, called foliation, as a result of directed stress. Foliation, called banding or layering, is probably the single most characteristic property of metamorphic rocks. For example, slate is a metamorphic rock in which there has been little recrystallization of fine-grained sedimentary shale, but mineral realignment gives the rock a tendency to break along smooth planes termed slaty cleavage. Further higher-grade metamorphic conditions lead to a foliation called schistosity, resulting in schists, formed when tabular minerals, such as hornblende, graphite, mica, or talc are aligned and tightly packed in a parallel fashion. High grade metamorphism can segregate minerals, thereby forming bands. This foliation is called gneissic layering and forms gneiss from such rock as granite. Foliation does not always occur during metamorphism.

Changes in Chemical Constituents

Chemical changes occurring during metamorphism also can rearrange the chemical constituents into assemblages stable in their new environment, thus often forming new minerals of essentially the same chemical composition as those occurring in the rock prior to metamorphism. For example, hornblende can be changed into garnet or pyroxene. The mineral composition of rocks may also be altered by the addition of new elements or by the removal of elements formerly present through the action of circulating liquids or gases or by recrystallization under pressure.

Types of Metamorphism

Local Metamorphism

Contact metamorphism occurs when local rocks are metamorphosed by the heat from an igneous intrusion, such as limestone turning to marble along the contact zone. Some of the changes that occur in the older rock are due simply to the heat radiated from the igneous mass and to the pressures it creates. More extensive alterations are produced by the fluids and gases given off by the igneous mass; metamorphism of this type rarely causes foliation. Rocks around hot springs, or mineral-rich water, both of which are common along active plate boundary ridges (see plate tectonics), are often changed by hydrothermal metamorphism (or metasomatism), which may, for example, transform granite into china clay; black smokers, which occur along mid-ocean ridges, are the exit vents for extensive hydrothermal systems that alter basalts and can deposit mounds of metalliferous sediments on the seafloor. Metamorphic rocks that develop by shearing and crushing of the rock at low temperature are called cataclastic and are usually associated with the mechanical forces, especially pressure, involved in faulting (see fault).

Regional Metamorphism

Metamorphism on a grander scale, called regional metamorphism, accompanies mountain-building activity. These metamorphic rocks pervade regions that have been subjected to intense pressures and temperatures during the development of mountain chains along boundaries between crustal plates. Large scale, intense regional metamorphism is particularly great in the "roots" of these mountains, which were at considerable depths when the pressures forming the mountains were active. These kinds of metamorphic rocks are most commonly exposed in old mountain chains, like the Blue Ridge Mts., that have substantially eroded away over time, leaving only disturbed structure and regional metamorphic rocks.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Metamorphism
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books on: Metamorphism  - 147 results

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...The Folding of Rocks 162 The Metamorphism of Rocks 167 12 The Alps 172...and it may also form during the metamorphism (change in mineralogy and texture of...reason, zircon survives deep hurial and metamorphism, and zircons arc commonly older than...
...and tuffs. Andesite, basalt, dacite, rhyolite. 14. Metamorphic Rocks 145 Metamorphism types, contact zones; landforms. Ortho and para gneiss; topographic expression. Crystalline limestone. Schists types...
...sometimes have been obliterated during metamorphism. Metamorphoric rocks can nevertheless frequently...that may have been newly developed by metamorphism.Based on the facts that metamorphism can be induced by either igneous activity...
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journal articles on: Metamorphism  - 3 results

 
 
...await Eugene Shoemakers groundbreaking studies on shock metamorphism in the 1950s and early 1960s. 28 Later, satellite and...melt breccia and other tell-tale evidence of massive shock metamorphism in the target rock. In addition, the detailed chemistry...
...elementary components, they can only be assigned their positive definition through the difference. Through this kind of metamorphism Bourdieu locates his connection to as well as his delimitation from the structural paradigm as he joins it to the correlation...
...rock samples from a small area in Rhode Island to flesh out differential regional phases of structural transformation and metamorphism. Later, after working as a field assistant for doctoral students who were mapping structural histories in northern California...


 

magazine articles on: Metamorphism  - 5 results

 
 
...marble is the result of medium-grade metamorphism of calcite (calcium carbonate) or dolomite...Compression, burial, heating, and consequent metamorphism can then produce marble in the depths...mainly by heat, it is called contact metamorphism; if brought about by both heat and...
...Gallery, works on paper at Mary Boone) she seems to be putting that well-worn modernist trope through what geologists call a metamorphism - the kind of deformation that occurs under the effect of extreme heat or pressure. The vertiginously looping bands of color...
...when superheated water, saturated with silica, flowed through the cracks in the basalts and rhyolites caused by the regional metamorphism. Then, in a geologic blink that lasted approximately ten to twenty thousand years, the western coast of North America expanded...
...which weather slowly. Rocks from Washington State formations, Michael determined, are fine grained and "from a low-grade metamorphism called a lower greenschist facies"-- composed of fast-weathering chlorite, actinolite, albite, and calcite. His ultimate...
...probably high mountain range 30-20 mya. Radioactive uranium and lead isotope dating suggests that thickening of the crust, metamorphism and melting reached a peak at this time. The Tibetan plateau was also high, but exactly how high it is impossible to say...


 

newspaper articles on: Metamorphism  - 4 results

 
 
...expect any answers to these questions, especially from Robbie Savage, who is this weeks living, seething proof that such a metamorphism from pantomime villain to legitimate villain does indeed happen. His pathetic actions last Wednesday were evidence enough...
...will multiply our knowledge about this shadow land. Most rocks as old as the ones studied have undergone a process called metamorphism, an intense geological heating that changes them and which scientists believed would destroy any organic compounds they contained...
...their mistakes. Do they grow? Or do they stew in sour sauce? Mr. Glendening has criticized his rematch rivals public metamorphism as waffling, as doing an about-face on key conservative issues such as gun control and abortion. He says it indicates shes...
...differentiated and "evolved" (almost like a living species) under certain conditions during specific Earth processes like volcanism or metamorphism. It has particular properties, some of which are highly useful to man. We perceive it as "beautiful," perhaps; it refracts...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Metamorphism  - 17 results

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METAMORPHISM in geology, process of change in the structure...movements in the earths crust or by igneous activity, metamorphism occurs to reestablish equilibrium and changes the physical character of the rock mass. Characteristics of Metamorphism In general, a metamorphic rock is coarser and has...
...rock composed wholly or in large part of calcite or dolomite crystals, the crystalline texture being the result of metamorphism of limestone by heat and pressure. The term marble is loosely applied to any limestone or dolomite that takes a good...
...purest of the clays, composed chiefly of the mineral kaolinite usually formed when granite is changed by hydrothermal metamorphism . Usage of the terms china clay and kaolin is not well defined; sometimes they are used synonymously for a group of similar...
...SiO 4 , crystallizing in the orthorhombic system. It is a common constituent of magnesium-rich, silica-poor igneous rocks; metamorphism of some high magnesium sediments also can form olivine. Dunite consists almost entirely of olivine. It also occurs in lunar...
...yellowish, or light brown, but is sometimes colored blue, green, purple, or black by included minerals. It results from the metamorphism of pure quartz sandstone . It is most easily distinguished from sandstone by the fact that it fractures across its constituent...
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