Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T08:50:41.706Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Uvarovite and grossular from the Fengtien nephrite deposits, eastern Taiwan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2018

Hsien-Ming Wan
Affiliation:
Mining Research and Service Organization, Industrial Technology Research Institute, 1 Tun Hwa South Road, Taipei 105, Taiwan

Abstract

Uvarovite and grossular, the former comparatively rare, occur along the serpentinite-graphite schist contact in the Fengtien area, on the eastern slope of the Central Range of Taiwan. Uvarovite occurs as small emerald-green euhedral crystals on diopside-fels with dodecahedral crystal forms and many other modifications. Its refractive index is 1.782, specific gravity 3.702, and unit cell edge 11.912 Å. Chemical and probe analyses give average Cr2O3 contents of 11.60 wt. %; spectrographic analysis shows significant enrichment in Cr, Be, Co, Y, Sb, and La over grossular. Associated minerals include nephrite, diopside, tremolite asbestos, zoisite, and clinozoisite. Grossular is reddish-brown; large crystals, dodecahedral in form often modified by trapezohedrons, are associated with diopside, idocrase, and calcite. n = 1.746, SG = 3.636, and a = 11.866 Å. Structurally and chemically it is quite near the grossular end member. Grossular is considered to be formed from pneumatolysis associated with the intrusion of ultramafic rocks, whereas uvarovite is a replacement product of relict chromite in the original ultramafic rocks where migration of elements such as silicon and calcium from wall rocks are prominent.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1984

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

See note on p. 37.

References

Chakraborty, K. L. (1968) Am. Mineral. 53, 962–5.Google Scholar
Deer, W. A., Howie, R. A., and Zussman, J. (1963) Rock Forming Minerals, 1. John Wiley, New York, 104.Google Scholar
Frankel, J. J. (1959) Am. Mineral. 44, 565–91.Google Scholar
Ho, C. S. (1975) An Introduction to the Geology of Taiwan. Ministry of Economic Affairs, Republic of China.Google Scholar
Huang, C. K. (1969) Ada Geol. Taiwanica. 13, 1–7.Google Scholar
Huang, C. K. and Yeh, C. L. (1978) Gemmological Soc. Japan. 5, 13–20.Google Scholar
Lee, W. C., and Yui, T. F. (1980) Proc. Geol. Soc. China. 23, 76–91.Google Scholar
Lee, W. C., Tien, L. P., and Yui, T. F. (1978) NSC Special Publication, no. 1, 4269.Google Scholar
Medlin, J. H., Suhr, N. H., and Bodkin, J. B. (1969) Atomic Absorption Newsletter. 8, 25–9.Google Scholar
Skinner, B. J. (1956) Am. Mineral. 41, 428–36.Google Scholar
Tan, L. P., Lee, W. C., and Tien, P. L. (1978) NSC Special Publication, no. 1, 128.Google Scholar
Tan, L. P., Chen, S. J., and Lo, T. W. (1981) Proc. Nat. Sci. Council R0C(A). 5, 173–80.Google Scholar
von Knorring, O. (1951) Mineral. Mag. 29, 594–601.Google Scholar
Winchell, H. (1958) Am. Mineral. 43, 595–600.Google Scholar
Yen, T. P. (1954) Bull. Geol. Surv. Taiwan. 7, 1–46.Google Scholar
Yui, T. F., and Lee, W. C. (1980) Pro. Geol. Soc. China, 23, 92104.Google Scholar