Petrology and habit of some diabase sheets in southeastern Pennsylvania

Open-File Report 49-33
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Abstract

Small masses of granophyre occur in the upper part of diabase intrusions southeastern Pennsylvania. Diamond drill hole exploration of magnetite deposits near Dillsburg revealed a body of diabase beneath the sedimentary rocks in which the deposits occur. The drill core revealed a complete gradational sequence downward from a diabase chill zone through normal diabase, diabase pegmatite, transitional granophyric diabase into granophyre.

New data include the results of petrographic study of a series of specimens from the drill core and 10 new chemical analyses. The sequence, diabase to granophyre, shows progressive increase in alkalies and silica; iron increases into the transitional granophric diabase stage, then decreases in the granophyre. The chemical variations are accompanied by changes in mineralogy which are described in detail.

Field and petrographic studies of other granophyre masses were likewise made.

Possible origins of granophyre from diabase are considered, and it is concluded that crystal differentiation in a large sheetlike intrusion most satisfactorily explains the genesis of granophyre in this region. Prior to complete solidification a residual liquid rich in iron, alkalies, silica, and volatiles collected locally in the upper part of the diabase sheet. In some places fractures released volatile-rich iron-bearing solutions which deposited magnetite in the overlying sedimentary rocks; the remaining liquid crystallized to fine grained granophyre. Elsewhere the volatiles were retained for a longer period; the resulting rock is coarse-grained with numerous miarolitic cavities.

Ring-like outcrop patterns are characteristic of the diabase intrusions in southeastern Pennsylvania. Drill hole and geophysical data indicate that the diabase of these rings has the form of generally discordant curved sheets or basins. Pre-existing fractures or potential lines of weakness may have controlled the sheet-like form, or because of existing pressure conditions the diabase magma was forced to spread laterally rather than rise vertically.

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Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Petrology and habit of some diabase sheets in southeastern Pennsylvania
Series title Open-File Report
Series number 49-33
DOI 10.3133/ofr4933
Year Published 1949
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Description ii, 81 p.
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
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