The potash-soda-felspars. I. Thermal stability
- 14 March 1937
- journal article
- Published by Mineralogical Society in Mineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society
- Vol. 24 (156) , 453-494
- https://doi.org/10.1180/minmag.1937.024.156.03
Abstract
In a previous paper (24) the writer discussed the relations between the chemical and physical properties of a number of potash-sodafelspars, mainly of the schillerized or perthitic variety, and the effect of high temperatures upon them. The present paper gives the results of further examination of these and of several additional specimens selected to make the range of composition more complete.Twenty-six specimens were selected for this investigation. They include two albites, six microclines, and eighteen felspars which have been grouped as an orthoclase-microperthite series. The confused nomenclature of the alkali-felspars makes a choice of suitable names difficult. Alling's classification (1, pp. 253-254) represents a systematic attempt to overcome this confusion, but it seems doubtful whether some of his arbitrary subdivisions (e.g. ‘anorthoclase potentially eutectoperthite’ and ‘microcline eutectoperthite’) can exist.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The fine structure of felsparsTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1929
- Studies in the Feldspar GroupThe Journal of Geology, 1925
- Potash-oligoclase from Mt. Erebus, Antarctic, and anorthoclase from Mt. Kenya, East AfricaMineralogical Magazine and Journal of the Mineralogical Society, 1925
- XIV. Zur Frage der Entmischbarkeit der Kali-Natronfeldspäte und über das Verhalten des Mikroklins bei hohen TemperaturenZeitschrift Für Kristallographie, Mineralogie Und Petrographie, 1925
- Über die AlkalifeldspäteGeologiska Föreningen i Stockholm Förhandlingar, 1917
- The melting phenomena of the plagioclase feldsparsAmerican Journal of Science, 1913