Post by 1dave on Sept 7, 2020 9:30:10 GMT -7
Has anyone tried cabbing Blue Pearl granite from Norway?
I suspect the blue sheen is from a feldspar near Labradorite in composition - Andesine or Bytownrite.
Oct 26, 2016 7:31:55 GMT -7 @rockjunquie said:
Larvikite makes beautiful cabs! I haven't cabbed it myself, but I have had several. Larvikite! Finally a name! Thanks Tela.
Larvikite
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Larvikite from Larvik, Norway
Larvikite quarry, Larvik, 2008.
Larvikite, marketed as "Blue Pearl Granite" (showing labradorescence), is a popular decorative stone
Light Larvikite with a polished surface.
Larvikite is an igneous rock, specifically a variety of monzonite,[1] notable for the presence of handsome, thumbnail-sized crystals of feldspar. These feldspars are known as ternary because they contain significant components of all three endmember feldspars. The feldspar has partly unmixed on the micro-scale to form a perthite, and the presence of the alternating alkali feldspar and plagioclase layers give its characteristic silver blue sheen (Schiller effect, labradorescence) on polished surfaces. Olivine can be present along with apatite, and locally quartz. Larvikite is usually rich in titanium, with titanaugite and/or titanomagnetite present.
Larvikite occurs in the Larvik Batholith (a.k.a. Larvik Plutonic Complex), a suite of 10 igneous plutons emplaced in the Oslo Rift (Oslo Graben) surrounded by ~1.1 billion year old Sveconorwegian gneisses. The Larvik Batholith is of Permian age, about 292-298 million years old.[2] Larvikite is also found in the Killala Lake Alkalic Rock Complex near Thunder Bay in Ontario, Canada.[3]
The name originates from the town of Larvik in Norway, where this type of igneous rock is found. Many quarries exploit larvikite in the vicinity of Larvik.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Larvikite from Larvik, Norway
Larvikite quarry, Larvik, 2008.
Larvikite, marketed as "Blue Pearl Granite" (showing labradorescence), is a popular decorative stone
Light Larvikite with a polished surface.
Larvikite is an igneous rock, specifically a variety of monzonite,[1] notable for the presence of handsome, thumbnail-sized crystals of feldspar. These feldspars are known as ternary because they contain significant components of all three endmember feldspars. The feldspar has partly unmixed on the micro-scale to form a perthite, and the presence of the alternating alkali feldspar and plagioclase layers give its characteristic silver blue sheen (Schiller effect, labradorescence) on polished surfaces. Olivine can be present along with apatite, and locally quartz. Larvikite is usually rich in titanium, with titanaugite and/or titanomagnetite present.
Larvikite occurs in the Larvik Batholith (a.k.a. Larvik Plutonic Complex), a suite of 10 igneous plutons emplaced in the Oslo Rift (Oslo Graben) surrounded by ~1.1 billion year old Sveconorwegian gneisses. The Larvik Batholith is of Permian age, about 292-298 million years old.[2] Larvikite is also found in the Killala Lake Alkalic Rock Complex near Thunder Bay in Ontario, Canada.[3]
The name originates from the town of Larvik in Norway, where this type of igneous rock is found. Many quarries exploit larvikite in the vicinity of Larvik.