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KIMBERLITE FROM THE UNITED STATES 65
phyritic ' structure. A slice has been prepared for micro­scopic examination ; but here, as in the case of the others mentioned below, a brief notice will suffice, after Professor Lewis' elaborate description of the Kimberley rock, for the general resemblance is very strong. In this slice we find a number of grains, rather variable in size and form, some approaching idiomorphic, others rounded or apparently broken, but all serpentmised. Most of them were formerly olivine, but it is possible that enstatite also may have been present. There are various differences of detail in the colour and minuter structure of the serpentine, in the dis­tribution and arrangement of the iron oxide, and the like; but on them it is needless to dwell. These larger grains are scattered about in a more or less granular matrix, apparently identical with that of the Kimberley rock, in which serpentine and a carbonate, probably calcite with some dolomite, are important constituents. One part of the slice suggests the presence of fragments of a peridotic rock, embedded in a matrix of similar condition; but whether this is significant of a pyroclastic structure or of a fluxion breccia is open to question. Here, also, is a small ' patch ' of rather rounded mineral fragments, which seem to be a felspar.
The rock from Kentucky is represented by the following specimens :—
(a) [435, 1.] ' Dyke I., Elliott Co. (Crandall).' A rock resembling that from Syracuse in colour and aspect, but the fracture is a shade rougher, the rounded spots run to a slightly larger size, being not seldom about one-fifth of an inch in diameter ; they are less lustrous than in the other case, and of a yellowish-green colour (similar to that in the mottling of the other specimen and resembling that of olivine), and thus lighter than the matrix. Except in this respect the two specimens are very similar. Microscopic examination shows that this rock closely resembles one of the best-preserved specimens from Kimberley. The olivine