We use cookies to show content based on your preferences. If you continue to browse you accept their use and installation. More information. >


FMF - Friends of Minerals Forum, discussion and message board
The place to share your mineralogical experiences


Spanish message board






Newest topics and users posts
29 Apr-22:26:22 Re: collection of volkmar stingl (Volkmar Stingl)
29 Apr-17:56:49 The mizunaka collection - agate (Am Mizunaka)
29 Apr-16:45:46 Rutile from boiling springs, usa / mvm (minerals - virtual museum) collection (Jordi Fabre)
29 Apr-11:50:01 Re: libyan desert glass structure (Craig Hagstrom)
29 Apr-08:23:04 Re: collection of michael shaw (Michael Shaw)
28 Apr-13:43:16 Re: the mim museum in beirut, lebanon (Philippe Durand)
28 Apr-13:41:44 Re: munich show (mineralientage) 2023 (Philippe Durand)
27 Apr-15:08:36 Re: collection of joseph d'oliveira (Joseph Doliveira)
27 Apr-09:22:16 Re: the mim museum in beirut, lebanon (Mim Museum)
26 Apr-22:30:18 Re: collection of volkmar stingl (Volkmar Stingl)
26 Apr-17:32:07 Topaz on albite from pakistan / mvm (minerals - virtual museum) collection (Jordi Fabre)
26 Apr-17:12:33 Re: collection of joseph d'oliveira (Joseph Doliveira)
26 Apr-15:06:49 The mizunaka collection - adularia (Am Mizunaka)
26 Apr-09:23:05 Re: collection of michael shaw (Michael Shaw)
25 Apr-16:30:00 Smithsonite (cu-bearing) from tsumeb / mvm (minerals - virtual museum) collection (Jordi Fabre)
25 Apr-10:42:35 Re: collection of joseph d'oliveira (Joseph Doliveira)
24 Apr-15:16:46 Re: if anybody knows this gemstone, please tell me (Riccardo Modanesi)
24 Apr-12:18:57 Re: collection of enrique llorens (Enrique Llorens)
24 Apr-10:59:20 Re: if anybody knows this gemstone, please tell me (Gemstonebank)
23 Apr-22:50:59 Re: collection of volkmar stingl (Volkmar Stingl)
23 Apr-16:34:26 Pyromorphite from el horcajo mines, spain / mvm (minerals - virtual museum) collection (Jordi Fabre)
23 Apr-14:49:53 The mizunaka collection - quartz (Am Mizunaka)
23 Apr-14:05:56 Re: collection of michael shaw (Michael Shaw)
23 Apr-01:56:02 The mizunaka collection - rhodochrosite (Am Mizunaka)
22 Apr-15:21:46 Re: arsenopyrite, löllingite, and large baryte xx - but location help needed (Jordi Fabre)

For lists of newest topics and postings click here


RSS RSS

View unanswered posts

Why and how to register

Index Index
 FAQFAQ RegisterRegister  Log inLog in
 {Forgotten your password?}Forgotten your password?  

Like
120936


The time now is Apr 30, 2025 12:02

Search for a textSearch for a text   

A general guide for using the Forum with some rules and tips
The information provided within this Forum about localities is only given to allow reference to them. Any visit to any of the localities requires you to obtain full permission and relevant information prior to your visit. FMF is strictly against any illicit activities related to collecting minerals.
Shocked quartz, what is it?
  
  Index -> Minerals and Mineralogy
Like
2


View previous topic :: View next topic  
Author Message

Roger Warin




Joined: 23 Jan 2013
Posts: 1231


Access to the FMF Gallery title=

View user's profile

Send private message

PostPosted: Sep 17, 2013 15:57    Post subject: Shocked quartz, what is it?  

Hi List,
The notion of shocked quartz cannot be understood as it should be because words sometimes hide concepts.
A shocked quartz is not a crushed rock agglomerated into a breccia. Under high pressures (but limited temperatures) and without destroying their morphology, crystal quartz undergoes a first deformation along the plane (r) (10.1).
This typically occurs in alpine quartz, as shown by my pic of a Disentis quartz.
This quartz crystal then has a fake cleavage along (r), while others remain conchoidal fractures.
But the real shocked quartz are found in impactites, these rocks being impacted by a large meteorite. That is another story.
Roger.



Qtz-choc_R.jpg
 Description:
Shocked quartz
Disentis, CH
with a false cleavage induced by shock.
 Viewed:  19790 Time(s)

Qtz-choc_R.jpg


Back to top
Reply to topic Reply with quote
Like
1
   

Pete Richards
Site Admin



Joined: 29 Dec 2008
Posts: 841
Location: Northeast Ohio


Access to the FMF Gallery title=

View user's profile

Send private message

PostPosted: Sep 17, 2013 16:11    Post subject: Re: Shocked quartz, what is it?  

Roger Warin wrote:
Hi List,
The notion of shocked quartz cannot be understood as it should be because words sometimes hide concepts.
A shocked quartz is not a crushed rock agglomerated into a breccia. Under high pressures (but limited temperatures) and without destroying their morphology, crystal quartz undergoes a first deformation along the plane (r) (10.1).
This typically occurs in alpine quartz, as shown by my pic of a Disentis quartz.
This quartz crystal then has a fake cleavage along (r), while others remain conchoidal fractures.
But the real shocked quartz are found in impactites, these rocks being impacted by a large meteorite. That is another story.
Roger.


Yes, I agree that these are very different things. I believe quartz is considered to have a poor cleavage along {10.1}, and this is often manifested in alpine veins and pegmatites, where quartz gets broken along these planes, either completely or partially (a crack), and often healed by later growth. This stress is applied fairly to very gradually, whereas in true shocked quartz the stress is applied virtually instantaneously. I would refer to the first case as stress-fractured rather than shocked, but semantics are semantics....

_________________
Collecting and studying crystals with interesting habits, twinning, and epitaxy
Back to top
Reply to topic Reply with quote
Like
   

Bob Carnein




Joined: 22 Aug 2013
Posts: 351
Location: Florissant, CO


Access to the FMF Gallery title=

View user's profile

Send private message

PostPosted: Sep 17, 2013 18:40    Post subject: Re: Shocked quartz, what is it?  

True "shocked quartz" can be confused with quartz that has undergone metamorphic deformation (Boehm lamellae), and both kinds of features can occur together. Some workers have confused the two. I'd recommend the following article: J.S. Alexopoulos, et. al., 1988, Microscopic lamellar deformation features in quartz: discriminative characteristics of shock-generated varieties: Geology, vol. 16, no. 9, p. 796-799.
Back to top
Reply to topic Reply with quote
Like
   

Roger Warin




Joined: 23 Jan 2013
Posts: 1231


Access to the FMF Gallery title=

View user's profile

Send private message

PostPosted: Sep 18, 2013 15:26    Post subject: Re: Shocked quartz, what is it?  

Hi List,
Impactites are rocks that have been the target of a large meteorite.
Intense shock obviously disrupts the crystal lattice of mineral grains. When the pressure reaches a field of 5-35 Gigapascals (350000 bars or atm), it may appear in the quartz grains of impactites some "Planar Deformation Features" or PDF's.
PDF's are in fact planar deformation (or acicular grouped in a plane) that appear on many lattice planes. PDF’s aren’t fractures. They are composed of amorphous materials and they can be “decorated”, with bubbles of fluid inclusions.
The least attached plans of their parallel neighbors suffer deformation in the first place. Many other plans (characterized by their different orientation in the crystal) as the most preferred {10.1} are also affected. They were well observed on {01.1} {10.0} {00.1} {11.0} {11.1} {51.1}, etc.. This often gives the appearance of parallel lines that cross the thin blade. These crosses lines are also an identification of PDF's argument, distinguishing polysynthetic twins (repeated multiple times in feldspar or pyroxene).
These rocks are actually the real shocked quartz, a name imposed by scientists studying impact craters.
Roger.



Rochechouart-imp-glass-1_R.jpg
 Description:
Impactite with quartz grains
Rochechouart impact crater
Thin section XPol light
 Viewed:  19020 Time(s)

Rochechouart-imp-glass-1_R.jpg



Rochechouart-imp-glass-6_R.jpg
 Description:
Quartz - PDF's
Rochechouart impact crater
630 X
 Viewed:  19116 Time(s)

Rochechouart-imp-glass-6_R.jpg


Back to top
Reply to topic Reply with quote
Like
   
Display posts from previous:   
   Index -> Minerals and Mineralogy   All times are GMT - 5 Hours
Page 1 of 1
    

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum


All pictures, text, design © Forum FMF 2006-2025


Powered by FMF