Английская Википедия:Ellicott City Granodiorite

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Шаблон:Infobox rockunit

Файл:Photomicrograph granite PlateIX Fig2 MD Geological Survey Volume 2.jpg
Photomicrograph of Ellicott City Granodiorite under crossed polarized light. Field represents approximately 0.85 cm.
Файл:Ellicott City Granodiorite Fireside Stone & Patio May2013.jpg
Former quarry wall of the granodiorite in Baltimore County southeast of Ellicott City

The Ellicott City Granodiorite is a Silurian or Ordovician granitic pluton in Howard and Baltimore Counties, Maryland. It is described as a biotite granodiorite along the margin of the intrusion which grades into a quartz monzonite in its core.[1] It intrudes through the Wissahickon Formation and the Baltimore Gabbro Complex.

In 1964, C. A. Hopson grouped the Ellicott City Granodiorite with the Guilford Quartz Monzonite and the Woodstock Quartz Monzonite as "Late-kinematic intrusive masses."[2]

In 1980, Crowley and Reinhardt of the Maryland Geological Survey remapped the Ellicott City Quadrangle and referred to this unit as the Ellicott City Granite, rather than granodiorite.[3]

Description

Hopson[2] reported the chemical composition (by %) of the Ellicott City Granodiorite from two locations. H7-A is on River Road, 0.3 miles east of the Patapsco River Bridge, Ellicott City, and H18-1A is on U.S. Route 29, 200 yards south of U.S. Route 40.

Chemical % (H7-A) % (H18-1A)
SiO2 63.73 65.39
TiO2 0.52 0.47
Al2O3 17.28 17.13
Fe2O3 1.05 0.57
FeO 3.02 2.73
MnO 0.07 0.04
MgO 2.24 1.61
CaO 3.81 3.38
Na2O 3.63 3.47
K2O 3.53 3.90
H2O+ 1.02 0.76
H2O 0.04 0.03
CO2 0.00 0.1
P2O5 0.28 0.23

Early quarrying

Файл:Granite Porphyry PlateXI MD Geological Survey Volume 2.jpg
Polished slab of porphyritic granite from Ellicott City (c. 1898). Width is approximately 10.7 cm.

The 1898 account of Edward B. Mathews of the Maryland Geological Survey[4] of the quarries at Ellicott City begins with a statement that there were two quarries; one on either side of the Patapsco River. The rock on the eastern, or Baltimore County, side is "a fine grained mass, with a decided foliation or gneissic structure," while the rock on the western, or Howard County side, is "more uniform and granitic." The text also refers to the figure of the polished slab on the left: "Here it also has a porphyritic structure in consequence of the development of large flesh-colored crystals of feldspar which are disseminated somewhat irregularly through the rock, as shown in (the figure)." Mathews continued with a description of their historical importance:

Файл:Bulletin 426 Plate IV A Gaithers Granite Quarry.jpg
Gaither's Quarry, Ellicott City, photographed approximately 1898

Шаблон:Quotation

Файл:Weber's Quarry PlateXII Fig2 MD Geological Survey Volume 2.jpg
Weber's Quarry, Ellicott City, photographed approximately 1898

Mathews described recent (c. 1872-1898) operations at the quarries: Шаблон:Quotation

Age

In 1973, M. W. Higgins reported a radiometric (Rb-Sr age) of 425 Ma, which placed the Ellicott City Granodiorite in the Silurian.[5] In 1998, A. A. Drake revised the age to Ordovician based on the granodiorite's relationship with the Woodstock Quartz Monzonite.[6]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

  1. USGS Mineral Resources On-Line Spatial Data
  2. 2,0 2,1 Hopson, C. A., 1964, The crystalline rocks of Howard and Montgomery Counties: Maryland Geological Survey County Report, 337 p., (Reprinted from Cloos, Ernst, and others, "Geology of Howard and Montgomery Counties," p. 27-215)
  3. Crowley, W.P. and Reinhardt, Juergen, 1980, Geologic map of the Ellicott City quadrangle, Maryland: Maryland Geological Survey, scale 1:24,000. (online)
  4. Maryland Geological Survey Volume 2, 1898, The Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore.
  5. Higgins, M.W., 1973, Superimposition of folding in the northeastern Maryland Piedmont and its bearing on the history and tectonics of the central Appalachians, IN Glover, Lynn, III, and Ribbe, P.H., eds., The Byron N. Cooper volume: American Journal of Science, v. 273-A, p. 150-195.
  6. Drake, A.A., Jr., 1998, Geologic map of the Kensington quadrangle, Montgomery County, Maryland: U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Quadrangle Map, GQ-1774, scale 1:24,000