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Francis, G. H. (1955) Zoned Hydrothermal Bodies in the Serpentinite Mass of Glen Urquhart (Inverness-shire) Geological Magazine, 92 (6) 433-447 doi:10.1017/s0016756800064591

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleZoned Hydrothermal Bodies in the Serpentinite Mass of Glen Urquhart (Inverness-shire)
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsFrancis, G. H.Author
Year1955 (December)Volume92
Issue6
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s0016756800064591
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Mindat Ref. ID248518Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:248518:2
GUID0
Full ReferenceFrancis, G. H. (1955) Zoned Hydrothermal Bodies in the Serpentinite Mass of Glen Urquhart (Inverness-shire) Geological Magazine, 92 (6) 433-447 doi:10.1017/s0016756800064591
Plain TextFrancis, G. H. (1955) Zoned Hydrothermal Bodies in the Serpentinite Mass of Glen Urquhart (Inverness-shire) Geological Magazine, 92 (6) 433-447 doi:10.1017/s0016756800064591
In(1955, December) Geological Magazine Vol. 92 (6) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesAbstractFive bodies with either visible or inferred mineral zoning occur in the serpentinite mass in Glen Urquhart. Their mineralogy and petrology suggest a hydrothermal origin, and they are grouped with other hydrothermal injection phenomena in the glen thought go be phases of Older Granite activity. The two northern bodies seem clearly similar to simple vein deposits characterized by albitite without excess alumina (corundum). The origin of the remaining three bodies is discussed and the view that they too are deposits of albitite-type is favoured. They lack an exposed albitite zone, but this does not invalidate the comparison. Albitite deposits, it is suggested, originate where moving hydrothermal solutions from granites cut ultrabasic rocks. This origin for the veins is preferred to Larsen's (1928) suggestion that the hydrothermal veins represent late-stage sodic residual liquids left after the crystallization of most of the material of β€œ ultrabasic magmas ”.


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