During K-metasomatism of plagioclase several different types of myrmekite can appear: •
rim myrmekite •
wartlike myrmekite •
ghost myrmekite Rim myrmekite This is the initial stage of
K-
metasomatism in
cataclastically-deformed
magmatic plutonic rocks. The breakage happens primarily along
grain boundary seals and the K-metasomatism may locally replace rims of zoned
plagioclase crystals to form interstitial
alkali feldspar and
rim myrmekite (see illustration).
Wartlike myrmekite When tectonic strains increase and the cataclasis becomes more intense interior breakage in the crystals ensues and albite-twinned plagioclase crystals are bent. The K-metasomatism therefore can reach deeper into the crystals and increase its effects. Nearly complete to complete replacement of plagioclase takes place and leads to the formation of
wartlike myrmekite in places where the replacement was incomplete. The illustration shows tartan-twinned microcline having completely replaced plagioclase. The places with incomplete replacement are taken up by wartlike myrmekite. Gradations occur from rocks containing exclusively rim myrmekite to those containing both rim myrmekite and wartlike myrmekite and finally to those containing exclusively wartlike myrmekite. A very important observation is that the maximum coarseness (tubular diameter) of the
quartz vermicules shows a strong correlation with the
Ca content of the plagioclase in the original, unreplaced, non-myrmekite-bearing magmatic rock. The coarsest vermicules occur in the metasomatized rock where the original plagioclase was the most calcic. An example for the formation of wartlike myrmekite can be found at the
Twentynine Palms, California quartz monzonite which issued from an older, yet undated
diorite.
Ghost myrmekite This is the third type of quartz-feldspar intergrowth in metasomatic
granitoids. Again this process depends on tectonically deformed crystals. In this particular case an irregular subtraction of Ca, Na and
Al from deformed plagioclase happens which causes an imbalance in the relative amounts of residual Al and
Si. More Si remains than can fit into the lattice structure of the alkali feldspar that replaces the plagioclase. The result is
ghost myrmekite – either as tiny quartz ovoids in remnant
albite islands in the alkali feldspar or as tiny quartz ovoids as clusters without albite hosts in the alkali feldspar (see illustration). Examples for this structure are found in California in the
Mount Rubidoux leucogranite and in
granodiorites in the
Sierra Nevada. == Myrmekite formed during Ca-metasomatism ==