AbstractsEarth & Environmental Science

The north gap dyke of the Transkei

by Alan C. Moore




Institution: Rhodes University
Department: Faculty of Science, Geology
Degree: MS
Year: 1964
Keywords: Petrology  – South Africa  – Transkei; Dikes (Geology)  – South Africa  – Transkei; Petrofabric analysis  – South Africa  – Transkei
Record ID: 1565724
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007087


Abstract

Field work and mapping with the aid of aerial photographs have shown the north Gap Dyke to be a vertical intrusion 93½ miles long . It extends from a point about 4½ miles south of Cathcart to the coast where it enters the sea about 100 yards north of the Ngadla R lver mouth. It is composed of several rock types including dolerite pegmatite, granophyric dolerite, subophitic dolerite, and it has a more or less central core of mobilized sediment at the western end. The essential minerals of the dolerite types include zoned plagioclase, which is described in some detail, and augite. Less important are hornblende and micropegmatite. Accessories include apatite, ilmenite, magnetite, quartz, actinolite, prehnite, calcite and epidote. Iddingsite (?), saussurite and chlorite occur as alteration products. The mode of origin of the Gap Dyke magma remains an open question: it may have arisen as a result of normal crystal fractionation or as the result of hybridization in depth followed by differentiation.