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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PIG-POL |
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PITCHSTONE (German Pechstein, from its resemblance to pitch) , in petrology, a glassy igneous rock having a resinous lustre and breaking with a hollow or conchoidal fracture. It differs from obsidian principally in its rather dull lustre, for obsidian is bright and vitreous in appearance; all pitchstones also contain a considerable quantity of water in combination amounting ' to from 5 to 10% of their weight or 10 to 2o% of their volume. The majority of the rocks of this class occur as intrusive dikes or veins; they are glassy forms of quartz porphyry and other dike rocks. Their dull lustre may be connected with the great
recent
Some pitchstones are very acid rocks, containing 70 to 75 % of silica, and have close chemical affinities to granites and rhyolites. Others contain more alkalis and less silica, being apparently vitreous types of trachyte or keratophyre; others have the composition of dacite and andesite, but the black basaltic glasses are not usually classified among the pitchstones. Very well known rocks of this group occur at Chemnitz and Meissen in Saxony. They are brown or dark green, very often perlitic (see PETROLOGY, Plate I., fig. 5), and show progressive devitrification starting from cracks and joints and spreading inwards through the mass. For a long time the pitchstone dikes of Arran in Scotland have been famous among geologists for the great
mineral
hair -like trichites, and fine rounded globulites. When phenocrysts are present the small crystals are planted on their surfaces like grass growing from a turf
wall
ridge
porphyry , with glancing idiomorphic crystals of felspar in a vitreous base. It contains no quartz; the felspars are anorthoclase, and with them there are numerous crystals of green augite. The ground mass contains small crystallites of felspar, and is of a rich brown colour in thin section with well developed perlitic structure (see PETROLOGY, Plate II., fig. I). InThe first two of these contain much water for rocks the ingredients of which are but little decomposed. They are of acid or rhyolitic character, while the third is richer in alkalis and contains less silica; it belongs more naturally to the intermediate rocks (or trachytes.) (J. S. F.) End of Article: PITCHSTONE (German Pechstein, from its resemblance to pitch) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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