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Gneiss

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Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Infobox rock Gneiss (pronounced Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell) is a common and widely distributed type of metamorphic rock. It is formed by high-temperature and high-pressure metamorphic processes acting on formations composed of igneous or sedimentary rocks. This rock is formed under pressures ranging from 2 to 15 kbar, sometimes even more, and temperatures over 300 °C (572 °F). Gneiss nearly always shows a banded texture characterized by alternating darker and lighter colored bands and without a distinct cleavage.

Gneisses are common in the ancient crust of continental shields. Some of the oldest rocks on Earth are gneisses, such as the Acasta Gneiss.

Description

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File:Orthogneiss Geopark.jpg
Orthogneiss from the Czech Republic

In traditional English and North American usage, a gneiss is a coarse-grained metamorphic rock showing compositional banding (gneissic banding) but poorly developed schistosity and indistinct cleavage. In other words, it is a metamorphic rock composed of mineral grains easily seen with the unaided eye, which form obvious compositional layers, but which has only a weak tendency to fracture along these layers. In Europe, the term has been more widely applied to any coarse, mica-poor, high-grade metamorphic rock.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The British Geological Survey (BGS) and the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) both use gneiss as a broad textural category for medium- to coarse-grained metamorphic rock that shows poorly developed schistosity, with compositional layering over Template:Convert thick<ref name="BGS">Template:Cite journal</ref> and tending to split into plates over Template:Convert thick.<ref name="schid-etal=2007">Template:Cite book</ref> Neither definition depends on composition or origin, though rocks poor in platy minerals are more likely to produce gneissose texture. Gneissose rocks thus are largely recrystallized but do not carry large quantities of micas, chlorite or other platy minerals.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Metamorphic rock showing stronger schistosity is classified as schist, while metamorphic rock devoid of schistosity is called a granofels.<ref name="BGS"/><ref name="schid-etal=2007"/>

Gneisses that are metamorphosed igneous rocks or their equivalent are termed granite gneisses, diorite gneisses, and so forth. Gneiss rocks may also be named after a characteristic component such as garnet gneiss, biotite gneiss, albite gneiss, and so forth. Orthogneiss designates a gneiss derived from an igneous rock, and paragneiss is one from a sedimentary rock.<ref name="BGS"/><ref name="schid-etal=2007"/> Both the BGS and the IUGS use gneissose to describe rocks with the texture of gneiss,<ref name="BGS"/><ref name="schid-etal=2007"/> though gneissic also remains in common use.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> For example, a gneissose metagranite or a gneissic metagranite both mean a granite that has been metamorphosed and thereby acquired gneissose texture.

Gneissic banding

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File:Pure shear.png
Pure shear deformation of rock producing gneissic banding. The undeformed rock is shown at upper left, and the result of pure shear deformation at upper right. At lower left is the stretching component of the deformation, which compresses the rock in one direction and stretches it in the other, as shown by the arrows. The rock is simultaneously rotated to produce the final configuration, repeated at lower right.

The minerals in gneiss are arranged into layers that appear as bands in cross section. This is called gneissic banding.<ref name="Marshak 2009">Template:Cite book</ref> The darker bands have relatively more mafic minerals (those containing more magnesium and iron). The lighter bands contain relatively more felsic minerals (minerals such as feldspar or quartz, which contain more of the lighter elements, such as aluminium, sodium, and potassium).Template:Sfn

The banding is developed at high temperature when the rock is more strongly compressed in one direction than in other directions (nonhydrostatic stress). The bands develop perpendicular to the direction of greatest compression, also called the shortening direction, as platy minerals are rotated or recrystallized into parallel layers.Template:Sfn

A common cause of nonhydrodynamic stress is the subjection of the protolith (the original rock material that undergoes metamorphism) to extreme shearing force, a sliding force similar to the pushing of the top of a deck of cards in one direction, and the bottom of the deck in the other direction.<ref name="Marshak 2009"/> These forces stretch out the rock like a plastic, and the original material is spread out into sheets. Per the polar decomposition theorem, the deformation produced by such shearing force is equivalent to rotation of the rock combined with shortening in one direction and extension in another.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Some banding is formed from original rock material (protolith) that is subjected to extreme temperature and pressure and is composed of alternating layers of sandstone (lighter) and shale (darker), which is metamorphosed into bands of quartzite and mica.<ref name="Marshak 2009"/>

Another cause of banding is "metamorphic differentiation", which separates different materials into different layers through chemical reactions, a process not fully understood.<ref name="Marshak 2009"/>

Augen gneiss

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File:Augen-gneiss.jpg
Augen gneiss from Template:Lang, Rio de Janeiro City, Brazil
File:Orthogneiss oeillé - Ras Prat Cabrera (Canigou).jpg
Ordovician augen gneiss outcrop, Canigó massif, eastern Pyrenees, France

Augen gneiss, from the Template:Langx Template:IPA, meaning "eyes", is a gneiss resulting from metamorphism of granite, which contains characteristic elliptic or lenticular shear-bound grains (porphyroclasts), normally feldspar, surrounded by finer grained material. The finer grained material deforms around the more resistant feldspar grains to produce this texture.Template:Sfn

Migmatite

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Template:Main Migmatite is a gneiss consisting of two or more distinct rock types, one of which has the appearance of an ordinary gneiss (the mesosome), and another of which has the appearance of an intrusive rock such pegmatite, aplite, or granite (the leucosome). The rock may also contain a melanosome of mafic rock complementary to the leucosome.Template:Sfn Migmatites are often interpreted as rock that has been partially melted, with the leucosome representing the silica-rich melt, the melanosome the residual solid rock left after partial melting, and the mesosome the original rock that has not yet experienced partial melting.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Occurrences

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File:Road Cutting - geograph.org.uk - 820828.jpg
Dark dikes (now foliated amphibolites) cutting light grey Lewisian gneiss of the Scourie complex, both deformed and cut by later (unfoliated) pink granite dikes
File:Yttre Ursholmen Kontakt Kosterdiabas i Nebulitisk-migmatitisk sedimentgnejs.jpg
Contact between a dark-colored diabase dike (about 1100 million years old)<ref name="hageskov">Bjørn Hageskov (1985): Constrictional deformation of the Koster dyke swarm in a ductile sinistral shear zone, Koster islands, SW Sweden. Bulletin of the Geological Society of Denmark 34 (3–4): 151–97</ref> and light-colored migmatitic paragneiss in the Kosterhavet National Park in the Koster Islands off the western coast of Sweden.
File:Gnaisse Sete Voltas - Bahia - Brasil.jpg
Sample of Sete Voltas gneiss from Bahia in Brazil, the oldest rock outcropping in the crust of South America, Template:Circa 3.4 billion years old (Archean)

Gneisses are characteristic of areas of regional metamorphism that reaches the middle amphibolite to granulite metamorphic facies. In other words, the rock was metamorphosed at a temperature in excess of Template:Convert at pressures between about 2 to 24 kbar. Many different varieties of rock can be metamorphosed to gneiss, so geologists are careful to add descriptions of the color and mineral composition to the name of any gneiss, such as garnet-biotite paragneiss or grayish-pink orthogneiss.Template:Sfn

Granite-greenstone belts

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Continental shields are regions of exposed ancient rock that make up the stable cores of continents. The rock exposed in the oldest regions of shields, which is of Archean age (over 2500 million years old), mostly belong to granite-greenstone belts. The greenstone belts contain metavolcanic and metasedimentary rock that has undergone a relatively mild grade of metamorphism, at temperatures of Template:Cvt and pressures of Template:Cvt. The greenstone belts are surrounded by high-grade gneiss terrains showing highly deformed low-pressure, high-temperature (over Template:Cvt) metamorphism to the amphibolite or granulite facies. These form most of the exposed rock in Archean cratons.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Gneiss domes

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Gneiss domes are common in orogenic belts (regions of mountain formation).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> They consist of a dome of gneiss intruded by younger granite and migmatite and mantled with sedimentary rock.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> These have been interpreted as a geologic record of two distinct mountain-forming events, with the first producing the granite basement and the second deforming and melting this basement to produce the domes. However, some gneiss domes may actually be the cores of metamorphic core complexes, regions of the deep crust brought to the surface and exposed during extension of the Earth's crust.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Examples

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Etymology

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The word gneiss has been used in English since at least 1757.<ref>Template:Cite book From p. 308: " … to which we may add this conjecture, that the black vein-stone, or rock, usually called kneiss, at Friberg, … "</ref> It is borrowed from the German word Template:Lang, formerly also spelled Template:Lang, which is probably derived from the Middle High German noun Template:Lang "spark" (so called because the rock glitters).<ref name=etymonline>Template:Cite web</ref>

Uses

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Gneiss is used as a building material, such as the Facoidal gneiss. It's used extensively in Rio de Janeiro.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Gneiss has also been used as construction aggregate for asphalt pavement.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

See also

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References

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Citations

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Further reading

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