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Pyroxenite

Pyroxenite

A species of Igneous

Pyroxenite is a coarse-grained, light or dark green igneous rock. It can be crafted into jewelry, but its many practical and decorative uses include the building of kitchen countertops, use as a facing stone, construction of buildings and walls, the manufacture of cement, the foundation for roads, and the carving of decorative stones or cemetery markers.

Hardness
Hardness:

5 - 7

Density
Density:

3.1 - 3.6 g/cm³

General Info About Pyroxenite

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Physical Properties of Pyroxenite

Texture
Phaneritic
Colors
Black, dark green
Magnetism
Potentially Magnetic
Grain Size
Coarse grained
Hardness
5 - 7 , Moderate to Hard
Density
3.1 - 3.6 g/cm³, Normal Weight
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Chemical Properties of Pyroxenite

Silica (SiO2) Content
< 45%

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Rarity
Uncommon

Characteristics of Pyroxenite

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Cultural Significance of Pyroxenite

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Uses of Pyroxenite

Pyroxenite is a durable stone often used in construction, including for countertops, walls, and stone blocks, and it is commonly found used to make tombstones and stone benches. It may be crushed and then used in road paving as well.

Distribution of Pyroxenite

They frequently occur in the form of dikes or segregations in gabbro and peridotite: in Shetland, Cortland on the Hudson River, North Carolina (websterite), Baltimore, New Zealand, and in Saxony. They are also found in the Bushveld Igneous Complex in South Africa and Zimbabwe. The pyroxenites are often subject serpentinization under low temperature retrograde metamorphism and weathering. The rocks are often completely replaced by serpentines, which sometimes preserve the original structures of the primary minerals, such as the lamination of hypersthene and the rectangular cleavage of augite. Under pressure-metamorphism hornblende is developed and various types of amphibolite and hornblende-schist are produced. Occasionally rocks rich in pyroxene are found as basic facies of nepheline syenite; a good example is provided by the melanite pyroxenites associated with the borolanite variety found in the Loch Borralan igneous complex of Scotland.

Common Questions People Also Ask

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