Fig. 23.—Diorite-porphyrite, Gebel Abu Hodeid [12,143], × 40. f, porphyritic felspar (plagioclase); h, hornblende; b, biotite; g, ground mass, consisting chiefly of plagioclase and hornblende.
The triangulation point on Gebel Abu Hodeid not being an occupied station, I have not visited the mountain, but the guide sent to erect the beacon on the summit brought back a specimen [12,143] of the rock. It is a very fine-grained dark grey rock with tiny glistening specks. The sp. gr. is 2·88. The microscopic slide shows it to consist of porphyritic plagioclase in a very fine-grained holocrystalline ground mass composed principally of brown hornblende and plagioclase, with a little biotite and a plentiful sprinkling of tiny granules of iron oxides. The porphyritic plagioclases are inclined to idiomorphic forms, forming crystals about half a millimetre in length, and hence are not very conspicuous in the hand specimen; they are considerably clouded by decomposition, but still show repeated twinning very clearly. The hornblende, which forms the main constituent of the ground mass, is of a pale to dark yellow-brown colour, mostly in rounded granules in which cleavage is not very strongly marked. The plagioclase of the ground mass is likewise in tiny granules, mixed with the hornblende. Biotite is only sparingly present in the slide; it is in tiny brown flakes. All the minerals of the ground mass show more or less decomposition and clouding, and contain a fairly plentiful sprinkling of minute grains of iron oxides; flakes of this latter substance are specially evident in the decomposing biotite.
The diorite-porphyrite of Um Eleiga [11,527 B] occurs associated with fine grained gabbro round the old mines. It is a grey rock, breaking with a rough surface, in which porphyritic lath-shaped felspar crystals, up to three millimetres long, are somewhat sparsely scattered in a fine-grained ground mass. The sp. gr. is 2·82. The microscopic slide reveals the ground mass to be finely holocrystalline, composed of plagioclase and pale green to brown hornblende, with some magnetite. The plagioclase of the ground mass is partly in little laths, and the hornblende frequently shows a tendency to prismatic and fibrous forms. The whole rock is in a rather advanced state of alteration, all the crystals in the slide being strongly clouded by kaolin and other decomposition products.
The summit rock of Gebel Um Heshenib [10,392] appears to be a highly altered basic diorite-porphyrite forming a dyke in the surrounding schists. It is a dark-grey heavy rock (sp. gr. 3·04), of basaltic appearance, with white porphyritic patches, more or less rounded in form, scattered through it. The microscopic slide shows the white patches now to consist mainly of kaolinic matter, with which is mixed a clear mineral (sericite?), of very low refractive index, but showing rather high double-refraction colours; while the ground mass is a very fine-grained mixture of rather fibrous pale green hornblende with kaolinic matter. Hardly a trace of unaltered felspar remains, but it seems natural to ascribe the kaolin both of the porphyritic areas and of the ground mass to the decomposition of original felspars.
A dyke of fine-grained brown rock which occurs in the granite of the lower part of Wadi Kreiga [12,102] likewise appears to be an altered diorite-porphyrite. It is much less dense than the rock last described, its sp. gr. being only 2·68. The microscopic slide shows the main constituent to be plagioclase felspar in idiomorphic forms, much altered to kaolin and calcite and stained red by iron oxide. Between the felspars are irregular patches of chloritic and serpentinous matter, with calcite and flakes of limonite, the alteration products of a ferro-magnesian mineral which was probably originally hornblende.
Augite-porphyrite.
Fig. 24.—Augite-porphyrite, Wadi Muelih [10,359], × 40. a, augite; pl, plagioclase; h, hornblende, much clouded with iron oxides. The rock contains large porphyritic plagioclase and hornblende crystals not shown in the figure.
A dyke of augite porphyrite [10,353] occurs in the Wadi Muelih about half-way between Gebel Muelih and Erf el Fahid. It is a fine-grained reddish-brown rock of sp. gr. 2·79, with porphyritic white plagioclase crystals of considerable size (up to two centimetres in length) and other smaller porphyritic crystals of a dark schillerized-looking mineral. The ground mass, when examined with a hand lens, is seen to be a very fine-grained mixture of red and dark minerals, like a syenite in miniature. The microscopic slide reveals the dark porphyritic crystals as green hornblende, while the ground mass is a holocrystalline mixture of plagioclase and augite, with a little green to brown hornblende and abundance of magnetite granules. The felspars of the ground mass are mostly lath-shaped; they are much altered, and stained red by iron oxide. The augite, of a very pale purple colour, is abundant in the ground mass, sometimes in prismatic forms, but more often in rounded grains; it is altered in places to chlorite, becoming then green in colour. The extinction angles measured in the less-altered crystals range to over 40°.