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GOLD IN CEYLON.                                            93
few, and seldom well defined. The most prevailing species are granite or gneiss; the less frequent are quartz-rock, hornblende rock, and dolomite rock, which may be classed under the head of imbedded minerals.
The varieties of granite and gneiss are endless, passing often from one into another and at times losing their character by the transition, and assum­ing appearances for which, in small masses, there would be a difficulty in finding appropriate names. These mutations and remarkable variations are traceable chiefly to composition, the proportions of the elements, excess or deficiency of one or more, or on the addition of new ingredients. Nor should mechanical •tructure, variation in which, though hardly palpable in reference to causes, has an evident effect in regulating appearances, be omitted. Regular granite is rare; where found it is generally of a grey colour and fine grained. Graphic granite is still rarer. The quartz, where it is found, is black or grey rock crystal, and the felspar highly crystalline and of a bright flesh colour. The quartz envelopes the felspar in very thin hexagonal or triagonal cases, so that nothing can more vary in appearance than the longitudinal and trans­verse fracture of the rock. Petrifactions of wood, combining quartz and felspar, have been occasionally found in the interior. This is a mineralo-gical novelty, the latter substance never having been found in petrifactions of a similar nature.
Moonstone has also been found embodied in porphyric rocks in large masses, and is more beautiful than moonstone hitherto dug from rocks of decomposed white clay. Sienite is uncommon. It occurs in the interior, rather forming a part of rocks of a different kind than in great mountain masses.
Well formed gneiss is more abundant than granite. Its peculiar structure may be seen in many places, but no where so clearly as at Amana-poora in the Central Province, where it consists of white felspar and quartz in a finely crystalline state, with layers of black mica, containing, dis­seminated through it, numerous crystals of a light-coloured garnet. Both the granite and gniess are very much qualified by an excess or deficiency of one or other of the ingredients. When quartz abounds in a fine granular state, the rock often looks very like sandstone; of this there is an instance in the vicinity of Kandy. When felspar or adularia abound, the rock acquires a new external character : this variety is .common. In a few places the rock contains so much of these minerals that it might be correctly called adularia, or felspar rock. When mica prevails in gneiss, which in Ceylon is very rare, it acquires not only, the appearance, but very much the structure of mica slate. The instances of change of appearance in the granitic varieties from the presence of unusual ingredients, are neither few in number nor unfrequent in occurrence.
The more limited varieties of primitive rock, as quartz, hornblende, and dolomite rock, seldom occur in the form of mountain masses. Quartz is found in some places so abundantly in granite rocks as even to mal mountain masses. It is generally quite bare, and stands erect like denuded veins. From its pre-cipitousness it often exhibits the appearance of buildings in ruins. The quartz is in general milk-white, translucent, full of rents, and so very friable as to resemble unaimealed glass. Pure hornblende rock and primitive greenstone are not uncommon, and though they constitute no entire mountain, form a part of many, particularly of Samanala and the Kandyan mountains.
Dolomite rock is almost entirely confined to the interior, where it is found in veins and imbedded, and sometimes constitutes low hills. The varieties of dolomite rock are almost as numerous as those of granite. When purest, it is snow-white, generally crystalline, composed of rhombs that are easily separated by a blow, but rarely finely granular. When highly crystalline it is composed of about 56 of carbonate of magnesia, 36*9 carbonate of lime, 4-1 alumina, 1 silica, 2 water. A very fine granular kind is found, but it is so uncommon, that it was appropriated under the Kandyan dynasty to the sole use of the king. The great variety of this rock arises both from the proportion of carbonate of lime and of magnesia