Structure trip 1: Garth Run high-strain zone
I took my Structural Geology students on a three-day field trip this weekend to examine outcrops in the Blue Ridge and Valley & Ridge geologic provinces. Here's a few photos of the team at our first (of four) field study areas, the Garth Run high-strain zone:
Examining the structure and taking strikes and dips:



Fabric elements cross-cutting one another:

Mylonitic fabric:

Foliation wrapping around a feldspar porphyroclast:

This is kind of interesting: a big pancake (oblate ellipsoid) of blue quartz, with a potassium feldspar in the middle:

And if you zoom in close, you can see that the feldspar porphyroclast is broken in the middle (along the plane of cleavage) with non-blue quartz filling in the gaps:

I think this blue quartz likely formed in the pressure shadow of the resistant feldspar porphyroclast during flattening strain, and eventually that feldspar began to brittlely deform, extending in the direction of minimum principal stress.
Quite a bit of variation across strike:

The students found some nice euhedral garnets too, though this was a block of float from upstream, and not intimately associated with the high-strain zone itself:

More tomorrow, from Field Study Area #2...
Examining the structure and taking strikes and dips:



Fabric elements cross-cutting one another:

Mylonitic fabric:

Foliation wrapping around a feldspar porphyroclast:

This is kind of interesting: a big pancake (oblate ellipsoid) of blue quartz, with a potassium feldspar in the middle:

And if you zoom in close, you can see that the feldspar porphyroclast is broken in the middle (along the plane of cleavage) with non-blue quartz filling in the gaps:

I think this blue quartz likely formed in the pressure shadow of the resistant feldspar porphyroclast during flattening strain, and eventually that feldspar began to brittlely deform, extending in the direction of minimum principal stress.
Quite a bit of variation across strike:

The students found some nice euhedral garnets too, though this was a block of float from upstream, and not intimately associated with the high-strain zone itself:

More tomorrow, from Field Study Area #2...
Labels: blue ridge, field trips, igneous, metamorphism, structure, teaching, valley and ridge


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