Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 71

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 71
69 to Eocene, lying between Danian and Eocene marine beds (48). This might be around 55—65 My. But the presently exposed basalts must have been buried under an unknown thickness of rocks for at least some 40 My. Already before 1939, the petrographic studies of these rocks revealed their state of alteration, the effects of temperature and water under burial. We shall give some quotations as to the state of the traps, after Wadia’s description ((48), p. 215 —217): “Wide-spread meteoric and chemical changes are many: calcite, quartz, chalcedony, glauconite, prenite, zeolites. A host of other secondary minerales have been described from the basalts of different localities — chlorophaeite, delessite, cela- donite, serpentine, chlorites, iddingsite, and lussatite. By the discoloration attending these changes, the original black colour of the basalt is altered to a grey or greenish tint.” The inter- calated tuffs have a “shaly aspect”. The following zeolites are mentioned (p. 217): Stilbite, apophyllatite, heulandite, scole- cite, ptilolite, laumontite, thomsonite, chabazite. This assemblage of secondary minerals is considered to indi- cate temperature of up to about 300°C at the maximum of burial. Ade-Hall et al. (48 a) have demonstrated which changes take place in the magnetic minerals by hydrothermal effects. In the fresh cool lavas, there is a bi-modal distribution of the Curie points. On one hand, there are minerals with Curie points in the range about 100—200°C, on the other titanomagnetite in the Curie point range about 500—600°C. With increasing hydrothermal alteration the former change by oxidation to minerals of higher and higher Curie points towards the range of the titanomagnetite. Such changes have, accordingly, taken place in the Deccan basalts (48 a, Fig. 16). One might expect that during this series of processes the direction of the total magnetization was greatly changed. This was possibly the case for the Deccan traps; we have no evi- dence to the contrary. But for some other cases of high de- grees of regional hydrothermal alteration there are evidences for the assumption that the direction of the original magne- tization was retained. These evidences are close constancy of
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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