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schist

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

schist , metamorphic rock having a foliated, or plated, structure called schistosity in which the component flaky minerals are visible to the naked eye. Schists are distinguished from the other foliated rocks, slates and gneisses, by the size of their mineral crystals; these are larger than those of slates, being visible to the naked eye, but smaller than those of gneisses, which are coarsely foliated rocks as opposed to finely foliated, or schistose, rocks. As contrasted with the folia of slates, the folia of schists are rough-surfaced and irregular. Schists split readily along their planes of schistosity, like slates along cleavage lines. Like other foliated rocks, schists owe their origin to the metamorphism of preexisting rocks. The commonest of the schists is mica schist, the essential minerals of which are quartz and mica (biotite or muscovite). Other schists are hornblende schist, talc schist, chlorite schist, and graphite schists. Schists are abundant in the Precambrian (Archean and Proterozoic) rocks.

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schist

World Encyclopedia | 2005 | © World Encyclopedia 2005, originally published by Oxford University Press 2005. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

schist Large group of metamorphic rocks that have been made cleavable, causing the rocks to split into thin plates leaving a wavy, uneven surface.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article A new source of gem-quality cordierite and corundum in the Laramie Range of southeastern Wyoming.
Magazine article from: Rocks & Minerals; 9/1/2002
Free Article Night talk.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Quadrant; 6/1/2004
Free Article Transparent staurolite microcrystals from trainer, Pennsylvania. (Contributed Papers in Specimen Mineralogy).(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Rocks & Minerals; 3/1/2003

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A new source of gem-quality cordierite and corundum in the Laramie Range of southeastern Wyoming.
Magazine article from: Rocks & Minerals; 9/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...corundum is found in nearby chlorite-biotite schist and micakyanite gneiss. [FIGURE 1 OMITTED] These gneisses and schists occur near the margin of the Elmers Rock...relatively unexplored. Nearby pelitic schist and vermiculite with geology similar... Read more
Night talk.(Poem)
Magazine article from: Quadrant; 6/1/2004; 110 words ; NIGHT TALK A black night brings out stars which glint like flecks of ore in schist outcrops that stud Rough Ridge and Blackstone Hill and all the other ranges south and west of Oturehua. The night wind's mournful... Read more
Transparent staurolite microcrystals from trainer, Pennsylvania. (Contributed Papers in Specimen Mineralogy).(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Rocks & Minerals; 3/1/2003; ; 165 words ; The residuum of erosion of the Wissahickon Schist in south-eastern Pennsylvania contains abundant staurolite. (This same rock is also the source for staurolite in Patrick County... Read more
IRAN: HAMEDAN PROVINCE'S ANDALUSITE, RED GARNET IN FOCUS.
Newspaper article from: IPR Strategic Business Information Database; 7/3/2006; 161 words ; ...nonmetal resources in some 32 mines located in the region. The map has led to the identification of 100 million tons of andalusite schist deposits in Hamedan Province, a provincial official said adding, almost all Iran's andalusite and red garnet products are mined... Read more
Asprey Jacques: Tania Kovats. (Reviews).(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Artforum International; 6/22/2001; ; 594 words ; ...a half centuries on, in her exhibition Schist, Tania Kovats reworks the idea of sublime...mast in pursuit of her art. The works in Schist direct a just-perceptible wink toward...gives rise to absurdity and uncertainly. Schist is an unassuming but intelligent show... Read more
Rockin' gems: find out how your birthstone transforms from a diamond in the rough to a dazzling gem.
Magazine article from: Science World; 11/14/2005; ; 700+ words ; ...kinds of garnet can be found in rock all over the world. The most common garnet is mined from within a gray rock called garnet schist. Sometimes weathering (wearing down by wind or rain) of the rock leaves chunks of garnet exposed on the rock's surface. After... Read more
McDonnagh Residence: Ludlow, Vt.(Masonry Construction 2006--best fireplace)(Brief article)
Magazine article from: Masonry Construction; 7/1/2006; 159 words ; ...trail-side log vacation home. The majority of the stone--including two large pieces framing the main firebox--is a blend of Mica and Schist from a nearby quarry. The rest of the stones are weathered Quartzite boulders collected by hand from the homeowner's stone walls... Read more
Archaeological geology of the world's first emerald mine.
Magazine article from: Geoscience Canada; 6/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...within the contact zone between phlogopite schist and intrusive quartz and pegmatite veins...were excavated in the softer phlogopite schist with flat-edged chisels and pointed picks...la zone de contact separant une zone de schistes a phlogopite et de veines intrusives de... Read more
Grape expectations: an elegant celebration of wine-making in the far south contrasts with its sublime site.(Peregrine Winery)
Magazine article from: The Architectural Review; 12/1/2004; 489 words ; ...the middle of the dramatic scenery of the Southern Alps, it has a continental climate, with hot dry summers and crisp winters, schist based soil and a strong tradition of viticulture, which has now partly taken over from sheep farming. It is ideal for growing... Read more
Teaching nature amid the French mountains.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 4/1/1994; ; 700+ words ; ...such as the Tarn and Lot have cut their dramatic gorges. These rivers are born, not on limestone, but high on the granite and schist mountains that rose during a period of uplift three hundred million years ago. Mont Lozere is one of these granite massifs... Read more
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schist. (Image by Siim, GFDL)

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