Another olivine-gabbro [10,412], which forms a hill rising from the plain about eleven kilometres east of Gebel Selaia, resembles that of Gebel Atut, but is rather coarser in grain and contains less plagioclase, a larger proportion of hornblende, and probably a little accessory hypersthene. It is a dense dark and tough rock of sp. gr. 3·17, containing large black schillerized-looking crystals sometimes measuring one centimetre across, and a liberal sprinkling of white plagioclase with a few tiny grains of pyrite. Under the microscope, very clear and fresh labradorite is seen to form less than one-third of the rock; the crystals, which are mostly of irregular outline, are frequently enclosed in the hornblende. The hornblende occurs very abundantly as larger irregular green and brown crystals, with well-marked prismatic cleavage; it often encloses crystals of all the other minerals, forming a pseudo-celephytic border round the enclosed augite and olivine. Augite is somewhat less abundant than the hornblende, with which it is intergrown, in pale pinkish-brown crystals, slightly pleochroic, with very distinct vertical cleavage and irregular cracks. Twinning is not very frequent. The extinction angles are usually under 30°. A few crystals which show slightly stronger pleochroism (pinkish-brown to very pale green) than the ordinary augite, and straight extinction, are probably hypersthene. Olivine is present in about equal quantity with the augite, in large irregular grains, much cracked, but otherwise fairly fresh, polarising in brilliant colours; the cracks are blackened with separated iron oxide, but there is very little serpentinisation. There are a few small grains of pyrite and magnetite, but iron ores are not nearly so conspicuous as in some of the other rocks of this class.

Troctolite.

Fig. 34.—Troctolite of Gebel Um Bisilla [11,522], × 17. The crystals with the dark irregular cracks are olivine (o), altering to serpentine (s); the resulting expansion has crushed the surrounding clear plagioclase crystals (pl), forming large numbers of curved cracks into which little tongues of serpentine project.

If the gabbro of Gebel Um Bisilla is followed towards the summit, a diminution in the pyroxenic content, with a corresponding increase in the proportion of olivine, is noted, and at the top of the mountain we have a troctolite, or rock composed essentially of plagioclase and olivine [11,522]. It is a heavy speckled black-and-white rock, made up of colourless to milky and greyish-black grains about three millimetres diameter (see [Plate XXIV]). Its sp. gr. is 2·84. The rock looks like a diorite in the hand specimen; it weathers to rusty looking blocks of remarkable hardness. Under the microscope the mineral which looks greyish-black in the hand specimen is found to be olivine, colourless where unaltered in thin section; but the usual alteration to serpentine has gone on along irregular cracks, and the separated granules or iron oxide give the black colour to the mass. The felspar, which forms considerably more than half the rock, is a very fresh, though occasionally much cracked, labradorite. Both the constituent minerals are present in allotriomorphic grains.

Pyroxene-granulite.

Fig. 35.—Pyroxene-granulite, Kolmanab Hill [12,132], × 40. a, augite; h, hornblende; pl, plagioclase; m, magnetite.

The rock [12,132] forming the hill called Kolmanab, which rises from the coast-plain in latitude 22° 32′, resembles the fine-grained olivine free gabbros very closely in composition, but on account of its marked granulitic structure, is termed a pyroxene-granulite. The rounded form of the grains has probably been conditioned by movement of the magma during consolidation, but the rock contains no garnet or other typically metamorphic mineral, and there appears to be no reason for regarding this particular granulite as other than an igneous rock. It will have been noted that the augite grains in some of the fine grained gabbros show a marked tendency to granulitic forms, and the rock of Kolmanab appears to be merely an example of this tendency extending to the other constituents. The field relations are such as to suggest an intrusive boss. The rock is very hard and heavy, greyish-black and basaltic-looking; fresh fractures show tiny glistening grains when turned about in the hand. Its sp. gr. is 3·13. Microscopic examination shows it to be essentially a granulitic mixture of augite and plagioclase with a considerable amount of magnetite, and a little hornblende. All the minerals are of remarkable freshness, in rounded grains about a tenth of a millimetre in diameter. The augite, which forms about half the rock, is of a very pale green colour, sometimes showing faint traces of pleochroism with the same pinkish tints as hypersthene, from which, however, it is easily distinguished by its high extinction angles. It encloses abundant rounded colourless granules, which appear to be felspar. The felspar is an acid labradorite, and forms a mosaic among the augite grains; besides the twinned crystals, there are others which show no trace of this feature, and some of these may possibly be quartz. Hornblende occurs, not very abundantly, in larger crystals than the other constituents, grains of which it frequently encloses; it is of an olive-green colour. Magnetite is scattered through the entire rock in rounded grains, and is specially frequent enclosed in the hornblende.

Diabases.