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A Colour Atlas of Carbonate Sediments and Rocks Under the Microscope

A E Adams (Broschiert, Englisch)

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Beschreibung
Examination of thin sections under the microscope is a key part of any study of carbonate sediments, as a companion to field or core logging, and as a necessary precursor to geochemical analysis. This book is designed as a laboratory manual to keep beside the microscope as an aid to identifying grain types and textures in carbonates. For the newcomer to the subject, carbonates can display a bewildering variety of grains, compared to sandstones, for example, and we hope this book will help to give confidence to those initial observations. By illustrating more than one example of common grains and textures, we hope that the more experienced practitioner will also find assistance in identifying the unfamiliar. However, such is the diversity of carbonate sediments, that it is impossible to be completely comprehensive and if we have omitted your favourite bioclast, then sorry! Throughout we have tried to show good, but typical rather than exceptional, examples of each feature. It has not been our intention to supply much interpretation except where this is necessary to explain the origin of features illustrated. Two comments that we have received about previous atlases (Adams et al., 1984; MacKenzie & Adams, 1994) are worth mentioning here. Firstly, it is possible to claim that some photographs are over- or underexposed. Photography of carbonate sediments can be difficult, especially where there are micritic grains, which are almost opaque, set in a coarsely crystalline, clear sparite cement. The exposure has to be adjusted, such that, if the micritic grains are the subject of the picture, the cement may well appear overexposed, and if the cement is the subject, the grains will be underexposed and appear almost black. When using the microscope, the eye makes adjustments depending on what you are looking at, and in any case it is easy, and often necessary with carbonates, to vary the light intensity. Secondly, we have been asked why we have not supplied a full petrographic description of a rock. We do not believe that this can be usefully done from a photograph, typically showing a field of view a few millimetres across. Carbonate rocks can vary such that no one field of view is representative of the whole rock This is particularly true of coarser packstones and grainstones with a mixture of grain types. Those wanting a format for a full petrographic description are directed to Flügel (1982) and Harwood (1988). We have avoided using abbreviations in the text, but in each plate caption we have used the abbreviation 'PPL' for plane-polarised light and 'XPL' for pictures taken with polare crossed. Finally, we hope that readers whatever their level of interest in carbonate sedimentology, will, by browsing through this atlas, be able to appreciate just a little of the wonder of the geological world as revealed under the microscope, and share our excitement at the beauty and variety of natural textures seen in carbonates.
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Technische Daten


Erscheinungsdatum
01.01.1998
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9783510651931
Herausgeber
Schweizerbart'sche, E.
Sonderedition
Nein
Autor
A E Adams
Seitenanzahl
180
Einbandart
Broschiert
Schlagwörter
geology, grain, rock, carbonate sediment, texture
Thema-Inhalt
RBGG - Petrologie (Gesteinskunde), Petrografie und Mineralogie
Höhe
270 mm
Breite
20 cm

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