Fig. 21.—Augite-diorite, Gebel el Anbat [10,411], × 40. pl, plagioclase felspar; a, augite; h, hornblende, arising from alteration of augite.
The rock [10,411] which forms the dark hills called Gebel el Anbat, near the head of Wadi Kharit,[131] is likewise an augite-diorite. In the field it is seen weathered into rounded masses often resembling boulders, of great hardness, and covered with a blackish-brown skin. The sp. gr. is 2·97. Microscopic examination shows the rock, which is very fresh, to be essentially of the same type as that last described, but the augite is more abundant and so intimately mixed with the hornblende as to suggest even more strongly an alteration of augite to hornblende (see [Fig. 21]).
Mica-diorite.
Fig. 22.—Mica diorite, from a dyke at Gebel Abu Hegilig [10,391], × 17. f, felspar (mainly plagioclase); b, biotite altering with formation of limonite; h, hornblende; ap, apatite; m, magnetite.
Most of the diorites of South-Eastern Egypt contain little or no biotite as an accessory constituent. An exception occurs, however, in a great dyke [10,391] of very fine grained diorite of sp. gr. 2·87, which traverses the granite of Gebel Abu Hegilig, and which contains more biotite than hornblende. The dyke is so decomposed that it is difficult to get a coherent hand specimen; but a slide cut from one of the less altered portions shows the rock to be a very fine grained holocrystalline one, made up of plagioclase, biotite, hornblende, apatite and magnetite, with abundant alteration products such as epidote, kaolin, and chlorite. All the minerals, except the apatite and some of the iron oxides, are allotriomorphic. The felspars are very much altered, but appear to be mainly plagioclase. The biotite is in little brown ragged-looking plates, strongly pleochroic, frequently altered with separation of flakes of limonite. The hornblende is green, in small and very irregular-shaped crystals, which show very little trace of cleavage and are frequently chloritised. The apatite is in long hexagonal clear prisms. Iron oxides, sometimes showing square or hexagonal outlines, and epidote in granules, are liberally scattered through the rock. From the abundance of biotite and the fine grain and manner of occurrence of this rock it was taken in the field for a decomposed lamprophyre; but the entire absence of idiomorphism in the ferro-magnesian minerals show that it should rather be placed with the diorites.
Diorite-porphyrite.
Rocks which may be somewhat doubtfully classed as altered diorite-porphyrites occur at Gebel Abu Hodeid as well as near the ruins of Um Eleiga and at Gebel Um Heshenib.