TOURMALINE-GROUP MINERALS IN GRENVILLE ROCKS FROM NEW YORK: RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN COMPOSITION AND THE GEOLOGICAL SETTING
The dominant compositional groups of tourmalines, based on cation assignment to different crystallographic sites, are alkali (schorl, dravite, chromdravite and a member of the olenite-elbaite series) and calcic (uvite) tourmalines. Possible new species such as F-analogue of dravite (in brecciated quartz vein crosscutting a marble body), Mn-rich OH-analogue of uvite (tremolite talc schists) and F-analogue of feruvite (Fe B F deposit) were identified.
Weak zoning is displayed by some crystals, but the difference in the chemical composition between zones is not significant; only one sample shows a core with uvite composition overgrown by a wide rim with schorl chemistry. Alteration is not common; only one specimen was found extensively altered to a glassy, yellow-green, sheet silicate along fractures and crystal faces.
The chemical composition shows extensive substitutions of Na and K for Ca in the X-site (from 0.92 apfu Ca and 0.09 apfu Na in marbles to 0 apfu Ca and 0.87 apfu Na in pegmatites). Ti4+ (up 0.27 apfu), Mn2+ (up to 0.61 apfu) both in the talc tremolite schists, V3+ (up to 0.03 apfu), and Cr3+ (up to 0.1 apfu) are the most significant components in Y- and Z-site. Significant replacements of (OH)- and O2- by F- in W-site form the F-dominant species, prevailing in marbles.
The geological distribution of the tourmaline species shows their preference for a specific host, and indicates both the source of their components and the mineral-forming reactions. Schorl and some dravite specimens occur in pegmatites, uvite, dravite, OH-analogue of uvite and F-analogue of dravite are found in marbles, and Mn-rich OH-analogue of uvite and Mn-rich dravite are specifically associated with the talc tremolite schists. Unusual occurrences of chromdravite in talc tremolite schists and Al-rich (8 apfu Al) tourmaline in marbles are related to the local geologic setting.