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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TOO-TUM |
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TRACHYTE (Gr. rpaxus, rough) , in petrology, a group of volcanic rocks which consist mainly of sanidine (or glassy orthoclase) felspar. Very often they have minute irregular steam cavities which make the broken surfaces of specimens of these rocks rough and irregular, and from this character they have derived their name. It was first given by }fatly to certain rocks of this class from Auvergne, and was long used in a much wider sense than that defined above, in fact it included quartz-trachytes (now known as liparites and rhyolites) and oligoclase-trachytes, which are now more properly assigned to andesites. The trachytes are often described as being the volcanic equivalents of the plutonic syenites. Their dominant mineral
Quartz is typically absent from the trachytes, but tridymite (which likewise consists of silica) is by no means uncommon in them. It is rarely in crystals large enough to be visible without the aid of the microscope, but in thin slides it may appear as small hexagonal plates, which overlap and form dense aggregates, like a mosaic or like the tiles on a roof. They often cover the surfaces of the larger felspars or line the steam cavities of the rock, where they may be mingled with amorphous opal or fibrous chalcedony . In the older trachytes secondary quartz is not rare, and probably sometimes results from the recrystallization of tridymite.Of the ferromagnesian minerals present augite is the most common. It is usually of pale green colour, and its small crystals are often very perfect in form. Brown hornblende and biotite occur also, and are usually surrounded by black corrosion borders composed of magnetite and pyroxene. Some-times the replacement is complete and no hornblende or biotite is left, though the outlines of the cluster of magnetite and augite may clearly indicate from which of these minerals it was derived. Olivine is unusual, though found in some trachytes, like those of the Arso in Ischia. Basic varieties of plagioclase, such as labradorite, are known also as phenocrysts in some Italian trachytes. Dark brown varieties of augite and rhombic pyroxene (hypersthene or bronzite) have been observed but are not common. Apatite, zircon and magnetite are practically always present as unimportant accessory minerals. The trachytes being very rich in potash felspar, necessarily contain considerable amounts of alkalis; in this character they approach the phonolites. Occasionally minerals of the felspathoid group, such as nepheline, sodalite and leucite, occur, and rocks of this kind are known as phonolitic trachytes. The soda-bearing amphiboles and pyroxenes so characteristic of the phonolites may also be found in some trachytes; thus aegirine or aegironic augite forms outgrowths on diopside crystals, and riebeckite may be present in spongy growths among the felspars of the groundmass (as in the trachyte of Berkum on the Rhine). Trachytic rocks are typically porphyritic, and some of the best-known examples, such as the trachyte of Drachenfels on the Rhine, show this character excellently, having large sanidine crystals of tabular form an inch or two in length scattered through their fine-grained groundmass. In many trachytes, however, the phenocrysts are few and small, and the ground-mass comparatively coarse. The ferromagnesian minerals rarely occur in large crystals, and are usually not conspicuous in hand specimens of these rocks. Two types of ground-mass are generally recognized: the trachytic, composed mainly of long, narrow, sub-parallel rods of sanidine, and the orthophyric, consisting of small, squarish or rectangular prisms of the same mineral
Trachytes are well represented among the Tertiary and Recent
district
Recent
Among the older volcanic rocks trachytes also are not scarce, though they have often been described under the names orthophyre and orthoclase- porphyry , while "trachyte " was reserved for Tertiary and Recent rocks of similar composition. In England there are Permian trachytes in the Exeter district
Closely allied to the trachytes are the Keratophyres, which occur mainly in Palaeozoic strata in the Harz (Germany), in the Southern Uplands of Scotland, in Cornwall
The word " tract " has come to be used for brief discourses of a moral and religious character only, and in modern practice it seems to be mainly confined to serious and hortatory themes. An essay on poetry, or the description of a passage of scenery, would not be styled a tract. In the Protestant
series of tracts, which were remarkable for their vigour, and exercised a strong influence on medieval theology. Bishop Reginald Pecock published many controversial tracts between 1440 and 1460. Sir Thomas More, John Fisher (d. 1535) and William Tyndale were prominent writers of controversial treatises. It was the Martin Marprelate agitation, in the reign of Elizabeth, which led from 1588 to 1591 to the most copious production of tracts in English literature; of these nearly thirty survive. On the Puritan side the principal writers were John Udall (1560-1592), Henry Barrowe (d. 1593), John Penry (1559-1593) and Job Throckmorton (1545-1601), the tracts being printed in the house
Nash
The most famous collection of tracts published in the course of the 19th century was that produced from 1833 onwards by Newman, Keble and E. B. Pusey, under the title of " Tracts for the Times." Among these Pusey's " Tract on Baptism" (1835) and his " On the Holy Eucharist" (1836) had a profound effect in leading directly to the foundation of the High Church party, so much so that the epithet " Tractarian " was barbarously coined to designate those who wished to oppose the spread of rationalism by a quickening of the Church of England. In 1841 Newman's " Tract No. XC." was condemned by the heads of houses in Oxford, and led to the definite organization of the High Church forces. (X.) Tract Societies are agencies for the production and distribution, or the distribution only, of Christian literature, more especially in SiO2 Al20, Fe202 FeO MgO CaO Na2O K20 H2O Riebeckite trachyte, Hohenberg, Berkum, Rhenish Prussia . . 66o6 16.46 2.25 1.10 0.19 0.79 6.81 5.52 0.62 Keratophyre, Hamilton Hill, Peebles, Scotland 64.38 16.98 4.04 - 0'28 1.08 7.57 4.30 1.64 Trachyte (Orthophyre) Garleton Hill, Haddington,Scotland. . 61.35 16.88 0.41 5.01 0.44 2.39 5.26 6.12 1.70 Trachyte, Monte Nuovo, Phlegraean Fields, near Naples, Italy . . . 60.33 18.74 2.84 1.29 0.38 1.15 7.15 7.30 0.56 Trachyte, Algersdorf, Bohemia 64.69 18.39 - 3.44 0.49 1.72 4.61 6.46 0.24 others are probably dikes or thin intrusions. As the analyses given above will show, they differ from trachytes mainly in being richer in soda. U. S. F.) End of Article: TRACHYTE (Gr. rpaxus, rough) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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