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Texture of Metamorphic Rocks
Metamorphic texture refers to the size, shape, and arrangement of mineral grains. It is determined by the environment of formation (temperature and pressure).
1. Foliated Textures
Results from Differential Stress. Minerals align in parallel layers or bands.
[Important Button] View Foliation Grades
- Slaty: Microscopic flakes (e.g., Slate).
- Phyllitic: Silky, wavy sheen (e.g., Phyllite).
- Schistose: Large, visible mica scales (e.g., Schist).
- Gneissic: Alternating dark/light mineral bands (e.g., Gneiss).
2. Non-Foliated Textures
Forms under Confining Pressure where grains are equidimensional (equal in all directions).
[Important Button] Key Examples
Granoblastic: Mosaic-like grains (e.g., Marble, Quartzite).
Hornfelsic: Randomly oriented grains from contact metamorphism.
3. Special Textures
Sometimes, specific crystals grow much larger than the surrounding matrix.
[Important Button] Porphyroblastic Growth
Porphyroblasts: Large crystals like Garnet or Staurolite surrounded by a fine-grained groundmass.
Chemical stability formula: ΔG = ΔH - TΔS