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quartzite - teaching hand specimen of maroon banded Lower Cambrian quartzite

$ 7.50

This quartzite is from the Emigrant Pass Member of the Lower Cambrian Zabriskie Quartzite. Initially this was nearshore marine sediment that became a sandstone with compaction and lithification. Subsequent deeper burial and metamorphism produced a quartzite from that sandstone, now essentially mashed together quartz grains. The freshly broken surface of a quartzite looks grainy without individual grains being visible.

Quartzite is one of the harder metamorphic rocks. When the continental glacier, over a mile thick, planed off the rocks of what is now Wisconsin, it rode up and over the Baraboo Quartzite and was unable to remove it. Countless geology students have discovered that what the glacier could not remove is not easy for a budding geologist to remove either. 

The Zabriskie Quartzite is Lower Cambrian in age.  Ask your students what kind of rock this was before it became a quartzite, and why they say so. If they answer sedimentary or sandstone, I would accept the grainy surface as a reason. 

 


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