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On the occurrence of Gyrolite in County Antrim

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2018

Extract

Although the mineral gyrolite has long been known to occur in the British Isles, namely in the basalt lavas of Skye, Mull, and the Treshnish Islands, &c., off the west coast of Scotland, and has more recently been described from the cliffs between Ardtornish Bay and the fault of Dearg Allt in Argyllshire on the mainland, no instance of its occurrence in the lavas of the north of Ireland has hitherto been recorded.

The examination, however, of a large number of specimens collected both for me and by myself during the past year and a half has shown that the mineral, though occurring in small quantity relative to the other zeolites with which it is associated, is fairly widely distributed throughout the harder lavas in the neighbourhood of Belfast.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Mineralogical Society of Great Britain and Ireland 1910

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References

Page 288 note 1 Currie, J., Mineralogical Magazine, 1905, vol. xiv, p. 93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Page 289 note 1 Cornu, F., Min.-Petr. Mitt. (Tschermak), 1907, vol. xxv, pp. 513521 Google Scholar. F. Cornu and A. Himmelbauer, ‘Untersuchungen am Apophyllit und den Mineralien der Glimmerzeolithgruppe.’ I. ‘Untersuchungen am Gyrolith,’ von F. Cornu. Sitzungsber. Akad. Wiss. Wien. Math.-naturw. Kl., 1907, vol. cxvi, Abt. i, pp. 1213-19-41.

Page 290 note 1 F. Cornu, loc. cit., gyrolite from Böhmisch-Leipa, H2O = 13.06 % ; gyrolite from Skye, H2O = 12.80 % ; reyerite from Greenland, H2O = 6.73 %.