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greisen

 
Dictionary: grei·sen   (grī'zən) pronunciation

n.
A granitic rock composed chiefly of quartz and mica.

[German, from greissen, to split.]


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A type of hydrothermal wall-rock alteration and a class of tin-tungsten deposits (greisen deposits). Hydrothermal wall-rock alteration is the process whereby rocks on the margins of hydrothermal flow channels are changed from an original assemblage of minerals to a different one. This change occurs because of heat and mass exchange between water and rock.

Granitic rocks altered to greisen are known as apogranites. They are composed mainly of quartz, topaz (fluor-aluminosilicate), and muscovite (white mica), accompanied by accessory minerals such as tourmaline and fluorite. Abundant veins of quartz-topaz are characteristic of intensely greisenized zones. Skarn and limestone on the margins of apogranites may also be altered to greisen (aposkarn greisen and apocarbonate greisen, respectively) with abundant fluorite. Apogranite greisen commonly is accompanied by other types of hydrothermal wall-rock alteration, including early feldspathic and late sericitic and lesser argillic.

Tin-tungsten-(beryllium-molybdenum) deposits in peraluminous granites commonly are accompanied by greisen. Ore minerals may include cassiterite, wolframite, scheelite, molybdenite, bismuth, and bismuthinite, accompanied in some deposits by pyrrhotite and sphalerite, in addition to chalcopyrite and other sulfides. See also Granite.

Tin greisens represent the dominant world source of lode tin, with examples in Southeast Asia (Malaya, Indonesia, Burma, Thailand); southeast China; Tasmania, Australia; Zinnwald and Altenberg (Erzegebirge), Germany; and Cornwall-Devon, southwest England. Greisenized skarn and apocarbonate greisen, also mostly tin deposits (but including beryllium and tungsten), are foundin western Tasmania, Australia; Seward Peninsula, Alaska; and Yunnan (tungsten), China. Manyof the tungsten deposits of southeast China, the richest tungsten province in the world, occurin greisenized granite. See also Metasomatism; Ore and mineral deposits; Pneumatolysis; Tin; Tungsten.


WordNet: greisen
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: a granitic rock composed of quartz and mica


Wikipedia: Greisen
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Greisen is a highly altered granitic rock or pegmatite. Greisen is formed by autogenic alteration of a granite and is a class of endoskarn.

Greisens appear as highly altered rocks, partly coarse, crystalline granite, partly vuggy with miarolitic cavities, disseminated halide minerals such as fluorite, and occasionally metallic oxide and sulfide ore minerals, borate minerals (tourmaline) and accessory phases such as sphene, beryl, topaz, etcetera.

Contents

Petrogenesis

Greisens are formed by endoskarn alteration of granite during the cooling stages of emplacement. Greisen fluids are formed by granites as the last highly gas- and water-rich phases of complete crystallisation of granite melts. This fluid is forced into the interstitial spaces of the granite and pools at the upper margins, where boiling and alteration occur.

Alteration facies

  • Incipient greisen (granite): muscovite ± chlorite, tourmaline, and fluorite.
  • Greisenized granite: quartz-muscovite-topaz-fluorite, ± tourmaline (original texture of granites retained).
  • Massive greisen: quartz-muscovite-topaz ± fluorite ± tourmaline (typically no original texture preserved). Tourmaline can be ubiquitous as disseminations, concentrated or diffuse clots, or late fracture fillings. Greisen may form in any wallrock environment, typical assemblages developed in aluminosilicates.

Greisen environments

Greisens appear to be restricted to intrusions which are emplaced high in the crust, generally at a depth between 0.5 and 5 km, with upper aureoles which are sealed shut to prevent fluids escaping. This is generally required, as the boiling to produce greisenation cannot occur deeper than about 5 kilometres.

They are also generally associated only with potassic igneous rocks; S-type granite, not I-type granodiorite or diorite. Greisens are prospective for mineralisation because the last fluids of granite crystallization tend to concentrate incompatible elements such as tin, tungsten, molybdenum and fluorine, as well as metals such as gold, silver, and occasionally copper.

Tectonically, greisen granites are generally associated with generation of S-type suites of granites in thick arc and back-arc fold belts where subducted sedimentary and felsic rock is melted.

Distribution

Typical greisen deposits include

  • Tin deposits of Cornwall
  • Ardlethan, Lachlan Fold Belt, Australia (tin-antimony greisen)
  • Timbarra, Lachlan Fold Belt, Australia (gold greisen deposit)
  • Anchor Mine, Tasman Fold Belt, Australia (tin greisen)
  • Pitinga topaz granite, Brazil (tin, topaz, beryl)
  • Lost River, Alaska, USA (tin greisen)
  • Erzgebirge, Czech Republic (tin greisen)

See also

References

  • Evans, A.M., 1993. Ore Geology and Industrial Minerals, An Introduction., Blackwell Science, ISBN 0-632-02953-6
  • Reed, B.L., 1986, Descriptive model of Sn greisen deposits, in Dennis P. Cox and Donald A. Singer, eds, Characteristics of mineral deposit occurrences: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1693, http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/b1693/html/bull217y.htm
  • Taylor, R.G., 1979, Geology of tin deposits: Elsevier, Amsterdam, 543 p. ISBN 0-444-41805-9

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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