A brush with unakite

This is another photo from Saturday's hike. Unakite is rumored to be the 'state rock' of Virginia, though it's not in the state code. Regardless of its official status, it sure is a distinctive sight: An epidotized granitoid, unakite is identified by the distinctive pairing of pistachio-green epidote and pink potassium feldspar. There's some grey/purple quartz there too. In the mid-Atlantic states, it's only found in the Blue Ridge geologic province. Here, on the trail below Dark Hollow Falls in Shenandoah National Park, my friends and I encountered this lovely boulder of unakite bearing a vein of milky quartz.
The original granitoid was Grenvillian in age, about 1.1 billion years old. Presumably the metamorphism took place during Alleghanian mountain-building, between 300-250 million years ago. Unakite has been quarried in Virginia for use as a building stone, and can be seen as tiles on the first terrace of the steps leading from the National Mall up to the southern doors of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC.
Labels: blue ridge, dc, igneous, metamorphism, minerals, museums, smithsonian, virginia


1 Comments:
What a beautiful rock! The colors are mixed so evenly it has to believe that they never were smeared over time with all of the heat and pressure.
A beautiful testament to the formatin of the Allegheny Mountains. If it is not the state rock of Virginia then it should be.
Thanks, very educational for us lover of geology who are not experts.
bill;www.wildramblings.com
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