The amphibolite which occurs three kilometres east of Gebel Erf el Fahid [10,361] is of extremely coarse grain, looking like a very basic gabbro owing to the schillerized appearance of its large hornblende crystals and the presence of a little interstitial felspar. The sp. gr. of the rock is 2·98. The section shows the hornblende to be of a very pale green colour, with an almost entire absence of iron oxide grains and other alteration products. Between crossed nicols it has a fibrous woody appearance. The interstitial plagioclase (probably labradorite) is likewise very fresh, showing its repeated twinning very clearly; the crystals are full of tiny fibres of hornblende, and are traversed by broad cracks filled with a mosaic of smaller crystals of plagioclase and quartz.
Fig. 44.—Amphibolite of Qrein Salama [12,157], × 17. h, hornblende, strongly striated, altering to chlorite; o, olivine, and b, bronzite, both passing into serpentine.
The rock [12,157], of the hill called Qrein Salama, to the east of Gebel Gerf, is interesting as containing olivine and bronzite in addition to the more abundant hornblende, and thus forming a link between the amphibolites proper and the peridotites; but as about three-quarters of the rock is hornblende it is still classed as an amphibolite. The sp. gr. is 3·05. In the slide, the hornblende is seen in irregular crystals, colourless to very pale green, with a fibrous structure which is strongly marked by patches of shading of extremely fine black prismatic striations. With crossed nicols the fibrous structure is still more apparent, the mineral polarising as brilliant fibres separated by chloritic alteration products. The pronounced striation and faint colour of the crystals are more suggestive of diallage than of hornblende, but the extinction angles measured in the slide are all less than 22°. Many of the hornblende-crystals contain large numbers of small rounded grains and strings of iron oxide. The olivine is mostly in rounded crystals, frequently included in the hornblende; it is largely serpentinised and full of small grains of opaque iron oxides, but kernels of the original mineral remain. The bronzite, which is present in about equal proportion with the olivine, is likewise extensively serpentinised and full of iron oxide grains; it is distinguishable from the olivine by a more fibrous appearance (the serpentinisation having gone on mainly along the direction of the vertical axis instead of along irregular cracks), and by its generally lower polarisation colours in the unaltered portions.
Peridotites.
The peridotites, or felspar-free rocks consisting largely of olivine, are usually classified into:—
(a) Dunites, consisting entirely of olivine.
(b) Harzburgites, consisting of olivine and enstatite or bronzite.
(c) Wehrlites, containing olivine and diallage.
(d) Lherzolites, containing olivine, diallage, enstatite or bronzite, and picotite or chromite.