Ch. 4: Gem Minerals of Pegmatitic Dikes

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CHAPTER IV.
GEM MINERALS OP THE PEGMATITIC DIKES.
In the pegmatite veins of North Carolina are found so many minerals of gem valuel that a short description of these dikes is given here.
These pegmatitic veins are interesting not only from a commercial standpoint on account of the value of the mica obtained, but also from a mineralogical standpoint on account of the variety of minerals that they sometimes contain.
In character these pegmatitic dikes are very similar to a granite and have sometimes been called " coarse granite " and, if we could conceive of the constituents of a granite magnified a hundred times or more, we would have an appearance that is very similar to a pegmatitic dike. The main mineral constituents of these dikes are quartz, feldspar, and muscovite mica in varying proportions, sometimes being nearly equally distributed while in others sometimes one and again another will pre­dominate. Sometimes the feldspar, quartz, and mica have separated out in rather small masses while at other times they have separated out on a larger scale and are more or less crystallized.
The associated minerals that occur in these dikes vary with their occur­rence and while in some there is a great variety of them, in others they are very rare. The pegmatitic dikes that are observed in North Carolina have furnished the greatest variety of accessory minerals, 45 having been observed from the different veins, at a number of which over 20 different minerals have been observed. Of these accessory minerals the garnet (either andradite or almandite) is by far the commonest and is often the only accessory mineral observed.
The accessory minerals in these pegmatitic dikes are usually well crystallized and a number of them are gem minerals. The following is a list of the minerals that have been identified in the mica-bearing pegmatitic dikes in North Carolina and they are given approximately according to their relative frequency of occurrence:
Quartz (massive, crystallized and Zoisite (var. thulite).
smoky).                                          Menaccanite.
Albite, Feldspar.                                 Rogersite.
'Joseph Hyde Pratt in "The Southland," Asheville, North Carolina, August, 1901, pp. 120-121.
Ch. 3: Corundum Gems Page of 87 Ch. 4: Gem Minerals of Pegmatitic Dikes
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