The last Post described two minerals
that had Lazard Cahn (Honorary Life President of Colorado Springs Mineralogical
Society) labels accompanying the specimens.
However, I have a third Cahn specimen that lacks a label other than what
is written on the outside of a small box with lid: L. Cahn, Thaumasite (white),
Berger’s Quarry, Patterson, N.J. The
inside of the lid states: Thaumasite, CHY, biotite. I am unable to interpret CHY. The "specimen" is a residue of
several hundred fragments of various minerals as noted in the microphotographs
near the end of the Post. This box was gifted to me from the family of Willard
Wulff, a Charter Member of CSMS and a student of Lazard Cahn.
Burger’s Quarry (not Berger's; AKA
Upper New Street Quarry) is one of several quarries near Paterson, New Jersey,
that have excavated and produced “Trap Rock” for decades. Geology.com defines
trap rock “as a name used in the construction industry for any dark-colored
igneous rock that is used to produce crushed stone. Basalt, gabbro, diabase, and peridotite are
the most common rock types referred to as trap rock.”
The traprock exposed at Burger’s
Quarry are part of several igneous formations exposed in various Mesozoic rift
basins that extend from Nova Scotia, Canada to North Carolina and even further
north and south in the subsurface and to the east buried by sediments of the
Continental Shelf.
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The Eastern North American Rift Basins along the Atlantic coast associated with the early Mesozoic breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea. Map courtesy of Roy Schlische and the Structural Geology and Tectonics Group at Rutgers University.
These rift basins are
associated with the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea around the Late
Triassic--Early Jurassic (either side of the 200 Ma absolute age boundary) that
resulted in the formation of the proto-Atlantic Ocean as the continents pulled
apart. Today we look at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and see these same rifting
processes working to further separate North America from Europe and Africa.
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View of supercontinent Pangaea. Map courtesy of Institute of Geophysics at The University of Texas Austin.
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Although the Atlantic Ocean represents “full” and
continuing rifting, there were several basins in North America where rifting
was aborted. These basins are structurally known as half grabens. A graben is where two normal faults bound
each side of the basin—as easily noted in the Basin and Range Physiographic
Province. In a half graben there is only
a single bounding normal fault. One of the best-known rift basins in the
eastern U.S. is the Newark Basin located in northeastern New Jersey (and the
site of Burger’s Quarry).
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Location of Newark Basin outlined in white. The green represents Triassic and Jurassic sedimentary rocks. The red arc in the northeast are the Wachung Mountains. Precambrian rocks bound the western edge of the Basin. Beyond those are the early Paleozoic rocks associated with the late Paleozoic Appalachian Orogeny. The yellow and orange are Cenozoic Coastal Plain sediments or sedimentary rocks. Map is Public Domain and courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey.
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Early on, as the Basin was subsiding, massive unsorted
sediments from the surrounding highlands were pouring into the lowland and
later consolidated to form conglomerates, sandstones and mudrocks (shale etc.)
known today as the Newark Supergroup. These sedimentary rocks are usually red
or orange due to the oxidation of iron oxide minerals that were in the original
sediments. There are also several lacustrine formations that represent large lake
systems within the Basin.
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The Palisades Sill (intrusive)is along the east side of the Newark Basin and extend north along the Hudson River. The Watchung Mountains are exposed flood basalts (extrusive) cropping out along the eastern side of the Basin. Top map courtesy of Columbia University. The lower drawing of the Newark Basin half graben is Public Domain and courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey.
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The sedimentary rocks of the Newark Supergroup are
well known for their enclosed fossils including dinosaurs, plants, “fish” and
various invertebrates. Perhaps the most
famous tracks are those of various dinosaurs discovered in “redbeds” of the
Newark. In fact, Eubrontes, a
three toed dinosaur only known from their tracks, was designated the State
Fossil of Connecticut in 1991. In the
same state, Dinosaur State Park protects hundreds of tracks discovered in 1966.
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Tracks named Eubrontes. Paleontologists believe that a three-toed dinosaur created these trackways in the rift basin sedimentary rocks. Since dinosaurs fossils cannot be positively "connected" to the tracks these impressions are termed ichnofossils. Public Domain photo courtesy of Dinosaur State Park.
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The tensions associated with the pull-apart basins allowed
continued faulting and tilting contemporaneous with the eruption of flood
basalts and the emplacement of subsurface dikes and sills due to decompression
melting of rocks of the earth’s mantle as they travel upward along thermal
plumes.
Sills are igneous rocks that are sheet-like and
tabular in design and intrude older rocks parallel to bedding or foliations
planes (concordant). They are usually
fed by dikes, igneous structures that intrude across existing bedding planes
(discordant). Magma forming sills cools
at a slower rate since the structures are intrusive into preexisting
rocks. This allows for crystals to grow
larger than those associated with extrusive lava flows, usually basalt.
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Cartoon showing the formation of sills that are
intruded parallel to bedding plains (Palisades Sill) while dikes (dykes)
intrude across bedding planes and may flow on the surface (flood basalts such
as the Watchung Mountains). Courtesy of Differencebetween.net
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The best-known igneous structure associated with the
basins is the Palisades Sill that trends along the Hudson River for about 50
miles north of New York City. The layered rocks form massive cliffs along the
River and are a well-known landform. The
Sill is composed of diorite, a magmatic rock with larger crystals than the
extrusive basalt and was the first igneous rock to appear in the Basin, perhaps
around 200 Ma in the earliest Jurassic.
Still in the early Jurassic, volcanic rocks broke to the surface in the
form of eruptions and flood basalts and formed the parent rock of the Watchung
Mountains in the northeastern part of New Jersey. Olson (1980) described these episodes
as three separate flood basalts that may have filled the entire basin with each
eruption. After each major volcanic episode,
the basin continued sinking and was again filled with sedimentary rocks with
the end result being alternating layers of basalt and red sedimentary rocks. With aborted rifting of the basin, deposition
and volcanism ceased and erosion became dominant.
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Highlands of the Watchung Mountains with Paterson, New Jersey in the far background. Public Domain photo.
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Today the Watchung Mountains are three (plus some
smaller remnants) parallel ridges of exposed basalt that are about 400-500 feet
higher than the surrounding landscape. The
First, Second and Third Watchung (as the exposures are known) are major
landforms and conservation groups fight to preserve their unique plant and
animal life as well as the exposures of columnar jointed traprock.
Perhaps more than any other group of minerals found in
the Watchung Mountains, the best known are the zeolites (microporous aluminosilicate
minerals) and their companions. One
cannot attend a rock/ mineral show without noting Watchung specimens of
analcime, stilbite, apopolite, chabazite, datolite, heulandite, stilbite and
especially of pectolite (sodium calcium silicate) and prehnite (calcium
aluminum silicate): both silicates often appear with zeolites. It appears that at Burger’s Quarry the extrusive
magma cooled in a lake and the basalt forming pillow lava. Many of the fine zeolite specimens crystalized
in the spaces between the pillows.
The Cahn specimen in my collection, thaumasite, looks
like (in my opinion) a zeolite. However,
it is a sulfate [Ca3Si(OH)6(CO3)(SO4)-12H2O],
but one that often appears with zeolites.
In the Watchungs thaumasite is formed when the basalt is heated by
geothermal action. It is usually
colorless, but may be white, and forms prismatic hexagonal crystals (like
apatite). Thaumasite is quite soft (3.5
Mohs), leaves a white streak, and is translucent to transparent. The clear, nice hexagonal crystals have a vitreous
luster while the smaller fibrous crystals have a silky luster. Thaumasite is not a common mineral and outside
of the rift basin basalts is sometimes found with other calc-silicate minerals
(as at Crestmore, California) or in hydrothermal copper deposits.
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Photomicrographs of microcrystals of mostly transparent thaumasite mixed with biotite and others! The longest crystal of thaumasite in the top photo (near the center) is ~ 1 mm in length. All of the other thaumasite crystals are less than 1 mm in length. The dark sheet mineral is evidently a mica of the biotite family. The greenish-brown fragments are unknown---perhaps smoky quartz sine many fragments show conchoidal fracture. Notice the .5 mm crystal near the center of the lower photo "perched" on unknown fragments of another dark (although not shiny) mineral. Perhaps the crystal is titanite, or perhaps not.
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I continue to search dusty drawers in small rock shops
for additional Cahn specimens or mineral labels. If any reader has a Cahn or Wulff label for
thaumasite, please contact me.
REFERENCES
CITED
Olsen, P. E., 1980, Triassic and Jurassic Formations
of the Newark Basin in Manspeizer, W.,
ed., Field studies of New Jersey geology and guide to field trips: New York
State Geological Association,
52nd Annual Meeting, Newark, New Jersey, Rutgers University.
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