enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Matrix (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matrix_(geology)

    Also in South Africa, diamonds are often mined from a matrix of weathered clay-like rock called "yellow ground". The matrix of sedimentary rocks is finer-grained sedimentary material, such as clay or silt, in which larger grains or clasts are embedded. It is also used to describe the rock material in which a fossil is embedded.

  3. Sedimentary rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sedimentary_rock

    Uluru (Ayers Rock) is a large sandstone formation in Northern Territory, Australia.. Sedimentary rocks can be subdivided into four groups based on the processes responsible for their formation: clastic sedimentary rocks, biochemical (biogenic) sedimentary rocks, chemical sedimentary rocks, and a fourth category for "other" sedimentary rocks formed by impacts, volcanism, and other minor processes.

  4. Quartz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartz

    Quartz is a defining constituent of granite and other felsic igneous rocks. It is very common in sedimentary rocks such as sandstone and shale. It is a common constituent of schist, gneiss, quartzite and other metamorphic rocks. [22]

  5. Kimberlite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimberlite

    Yellow ground kimberlite is easy to break apart and was the first source of diamonds to be mined. Blue ground kimberlite needs to be run through rock crushers to extract the diamonds. [27] Mir mine. See also Mir Mine and Udachnaya pipe, both in the Sakha Republic, Siberia. The blue and yellow ground were both prolific producers of diamonds.

  6. Pegmatite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pegmatite

    Rose muscovite from the Harding pegmatite mine Blue apatite crystals at the Harding pegmatite mine. Pegmatites form under conditions in which the rate of new crystal nucleation is much slower than the rate of crystal growth. Large crystals are favored. In normal igneous rocks, coarse texture is a result of slow cooling deep underground. [14]

  7. List of rock types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rock_types

    Phosphorite – Sedimentary rock containing large amounts of phosphate minerals – A non-detrital sedimentary rock that contains high amounts of phosphate minerals; Sandstone – Type of sedimentary rock; Shale – Fine-grained, clastic sedimentary rock; Siltstone – Sedimentary rock which has a grain size in the silt range

  8. Kyanite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyanite

    Kyanite is a typically blue aluminosilicate mineral, found in aluminium-rich metamorphic pegmatites and sedimentary rock.It is the high pressure polymorph of andalusite and sillimanite, and the presence of kyanite in metamorphic rocks generally indicates metamorphism deep in the Earth's crust.

  9. Cryptocrystalline - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryptocrystalline

    Cryptocrystalline is a rock texture made up of such minute crystals that its crystalline nature is only vaguely revealed even microscopically [1] in thin section by transmitted polarized light. Among the sedimentary rocks, chert and flint are cryptocrystalline. Carbonado, a form of diamond, is also cryptocrystalline.