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Minerals in rock sections

Chapter 5: PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION, 1898.
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About This Book

The book provides a practical handbook for identifying rock-forming minerals under the microscope by presenting essential optical theory, descriptions of petrographic microscope components, and step-by-step investigation techniques. It explains light behavior in crystals, methods for measuring refractive indices and birefringence (including Becke and van der Kolk procedures), interpretation of pleochroism, interference colors, extinction angles and interference figures, and criteria for distinguishing crystal systems. Individual minerals are described by their microscopic characters and typical appearances in thin section. Chapters also cover preparing and mounting thin sections, useful tables and diagrams, and simple chemical and mechanical tests.

PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION, 1898.

The identification of minerals in rock sections with the microscope, including as it does a knowledge of optical mineralogy, is often difficult for beginners. This may be due to the fact that most of the publications on this subject are quite elaborate in their nature and in either French or German. While detailed descriptions are very necessary, and, in fact, indispensable for advanced investigation, they are apt to prove cumbersome and confusing at first. For these reasons this text-book has been prepared by the writer, with a view of putting before the student only those facts which are absolutely necessary for the proper recognition and identification of the common minerals in rock sections. The footnotes refer the student to standard publications, in which are given details of the methods and investigations outlined in the text. An elementary knowledge of crystallography and mineralogy is almost indispensable and is here assumed.

The microscopic and optical characters of the minerals are recorded in the usual order in which they would be observed with a petrographical microscope. Nearly all the rock-forming minerals become transparent in thin sections; but when opaque, attention is called to the fact and the characters are recorded as seen with incident light. White light is assumed to be used, unless otherwise stated. The interference colors recorded in all cases are those given by very thin sections of 0.03 mm. in thickness.

The order followed for the minerals is essentially that of Rosenbusch (based on the symmetry of the crystalline form), with a few exceptions made for convenience, such as placing pyrrhotite after pyrite and zoisite after epidote. The statements regarding the occurrences of minerals in the common rock-types have been taken mainly from Les Minéraux des Roches, by Lévy and Lacroix.

The terms axes and directions of elasticity, used throughout this book, are very commonly employed in petrographical literature of the present time. These axes and directions should probably more correctly be called axes and directions of vibration or extinction. The reasons for or against the elastic condition of the “ether” are of more interest, however, to the physicist than to the petrographer.

An optical scheme is appended, with the minerals grouped according to their common optical characters.

The writer’s thanks are due to Dr. A. J. Moses, Professor of Mineralogy, and to Mr. J. F. Kemp, Professor of Geology, for kind suggestions offered during the preparation of this book.

Lea McI. Luquer.
Department of Mineralogy,
Columbia University, N. Y. City, October, 1898.