- Bostonite
Bostonite, in
petrology , is a fine-grained, pale-colored, grey or pinkishintrusive rock, which consists essentially of alkali-feldspar (orthoclase ,perthite ,anorthoclase , andalbite ). Some samples may contain a small amount of interstitialquartz and others may have a small percentage ofcalcium present in a sodicplagioclase feldspar. Accessory minerals includeapatite ,zircon andmagnetite , with rarebiotite ,hornblende orpyroxene . They have compositions very similar to thetrachyte s and are usually grouped with them. The texture common in these rocks include clusters of divergent or radiating irregular feldspar laths in a fine grained matrix.Typically they occur as dikes or as thin sills, often in association with
nepheline syenite ; and they seem to bear a complementary relationship to certain types oflamprophyre dikes. Though nowhere very common they have a wide distribution with occurrences inScotland ,Wales ,Massachusetts ,Ontario ,Portugal ,Bohemia , and other places.The term was widely used in the geologic literature of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but is currently being discouraged in petrologic usage.
References
* [http://www.maden.hacettepe.edu.tr/dmmrt/index.html "Dictionary of Mining, Mineral, and Related Terms", U. S. Bureau of Mines, 1996]
* Williams, Howel; Turner, Francis J.; and Gilbert, Charles M.; 1954; "Petrography"; W. H. Freeman.
*1911
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