Orthoquartzite
A rock classification type
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About Orthoquartzite
An indurated silicate-sandstone that is made up almost exclusively of quartz sand (with or without chert), that is relatively free of or lacks a fine-grained matrix; a hard but unmetamorphosed "pure quartz sandstone", derived by secondary silicification; a quartzite of sedimentary origin, or a pure quartz sandstone. The term generally signifies a sandstone comprising more than 90% to 95% detrital quartz and chert grains that are well-sorted, well-rounded, and cemented primarily with secondary quartz (sometimes with carbonate) in optical and crystallographic continuity with the detrital grains. The rock is characterized by stable but scarce heavy minerals (zircon, tourmaline, rutile and magnetite), by lack of fossils, and commonly by prominence of cross-beds and ripple marks. It commonly occurs as thin but extensive blanket deposits associated with a widespread unconformity (e.g., an epicontinental deposit developed by an encroaching sea), and it represents intense chemical weathering of original minerals and destruction of most, other than quartz, plus considerable transport and washing action before final accumulation (the sand may experience more than one cycle of sedimentation), and stable conditions of deposition (such as the peneplanation stage of diastrophism); e.g., St. Peter Sandstone (Middle Ordovician) of midwestern United States.
See Also: quartzite
Ref: AGI
See Also: quartzite
Ref: AGI
Unique Identifiers
Mindat ID:
50233
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:1:50233:7
GUID
(UUID V4):
(UUID V4):
941c068b-d7e2-4ac2-a388-006e083d9018
Classification of Orthoquartzite
Internet Links for Orthoquartzite
mindat.org URL:
https://www.mindat.org/min-50233.html
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Search Engines:
References for Orthoquartzite
Reference List:
Tarifa, Cádiz, Andalusia, Spain