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Chlorine-Rich Amphiboles from the Grenville-Age Hudson Highlands of New York State

Authors :
Emily S. Lincoln
Alexandra J. Gilland
Shannon R. Meyler
Diego R. Javier-Jimenez
Laurel I. Hebert
Spencer G. Schwartz
Griffin P. O'Brien
Raymond G. Schireman
Marian V. Lupulescu
Janey M. Masi
David G. Bailey
Sarah K. Powers
John M. Hughes
Emily A. Verhaeg
Source :
The Canadian Mineralogist.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Mineralogical Association of Canada, 2021.

Abstract

Some Grenville-age rocks exposed in the uplifted region of the Hudson Highlands of southern New York are amphibole-dominant igneous rocks. The amphibole-rich rocks, which are locally pegmatitic in nature, are associated with magnetite ore and coarse-grained syenite; the ore was discovered and mined from the middle of the 18th century to the end of the 19th century. The amphiboles have attracted the attention of many researchers for nearly two centuries. Chemical analyses demonstrate that they are pargasite or hastingsite in composition and are particularly rich in Cl and K. High-precision crystal structure analyses of 11 Cl-rich amphiboles from the Hudson Highlands (0.0134

Details

ISSN :
14991276 and 00084476
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Canadian Mineralogist
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c486474e12c23adfe771d46dd25742a3