Enroute to the Meadow


The Campus Schist is shown on the images on this page. The most distictive feature of this rock is its foliation, which is formed by the alignment of sheet-like mica grains. The foliation causes the rock to cleave along the horizontal planes, as seen on the photograph to the left. Two kinds of mica occur in these rocks -- muscovite and biotite -- along with quartz and plagioclase feldspar. At several localities the altered remains of garnet are present as well. A closer look shows some of the minerals and structure of this rock.The red is remnant garnet, the black is biotite, and the light colored material is a mixture of muscovite, quartz, and plagioclase. This mineral assemblage -- mica-plagioclase+/-garnet is diagnostic of an aluminum-rich sedimentary protolith. The protolith is the kind of rock present before metamorphism. In this case, it was probably an Al-rich mudstone or sandstone. The sedimentary environment could have been a delta, mudflat, or lagoon like the one at Natural Bridges; anywhere that fine-grained sediments or muds accumulate. The Al in the clay minerals in a sedimentary rock get metamoprphosed into the micas and/or garnets of this metamorphic rock. Most of the schist on campus is deeply weathered. The iron in the biotite has turned to oxidized minerals such as goethite and limonite, giving this rock its rusty brown color. Fresh schist, as can be observed in Cave Gulch, is steel grey to black in color. Good outcrops of weathered schist, showing the structure of the rock, exist in the roadcut on Steinhart Way between the Bay Tree Bookstore and the East Field House.
I am gladly accepting better photographs of these rocks!



All photographs by Kenta Williams 1995