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Encyclopedia > Porphyritic

(For other meanings of Porphyr, see Porphyry)


The baptismal font in the is made of rose porphyry from a site near ,
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The baptismal font in the Cathedral of Magdeburg is made of rose porphyry from a site near Assuan, Egypt

Porphyry is a very hard red, green or purple igneous rock consisting of large-grained crystals, such as feldspar or quartz, dispersed in a fine-grained feldspathic matrix (groundmass). The larger crystals are called phenocrysts.


Porphyry is a groundmass, which is a rock "structure". Its chief characteristic is a large difference between the size of the tiny matrix crystals and other much larger crystals. Porphyries may be aphanites or phanerites, that is, the groundmass may have invisibly small crystals, like basalt, or the individual crystals of the groundmass may be easily distinguished with the eye, as in granite. Many types of igneous rocks may display porphyry.


Formation

Porphyry deposits are formed when a column of rising magma is cooled in two stages. In the first stage, the magma is cooled slowly by contact with overlying rocks, creating the large crystal grains, with a diameter of 2 mm or more. In the final stage, the magma is cooled rapidly as it erupts from a volcano, creating small grains that are usually invisible to the unaided eye. The cooling also leads to a separation of dissolved metals into distinct zones. This process is one of the main reasons for the existence of rich, localised metal ore deposits such as those of gold, copper, molybdenum, lead, tin, zinc and tungsten.


Porphyry in history

In the ancient world, porphyry was quarried only in Egypt and was reserved for the use of the Pharaoh. In the Byzantine Empire, the palace room reserved for royal births was lined with porphyry, and the emperors born in this room were referred to as porphyrogenitus ('born in the purple').


Louis XIV King of France obtained the largest collection of porphyry by acquiring the Borghèse collection.


Example Porphyries


In its non-geologic, traditional use, the term "porphyry" refers to a purple-red stone valued for its appearance.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Saudi Aramco World : Via Porphyrites (3373 words)
The road from the quarry westward to Qena, which Ptolemy the Geographer put on his second-century map, was a route described first by Strabo, and it is to this day known as the Via Porphyrites, the Porphyry Road.
Archeologist Steven Sidebotham of the University of Delaware, an authority on the Roman roads of the Red Sea mountains, surveyed the Via Porphyrites in 1989.
I would have to miss the last water station—which is said to be completely ruined—and take a truck down to Qena, where Rome's presence still resonates in the magnificent Temple of Denderah— a temple which, ironically, lacks any sign of porphyry decoration.
Porphyry (Petrology) - LoveToKnow 1911 (1438 words)
The porphyritic intrusive rocks with large crystals of augite, olivine, biotite, and hornblende are for the most part grouped under the lamprophyres; while the term porphyry is rarely now applied to any of the effusive rocks or lavas.
Porphyrites occur as dikes which accompany masses of diorite, and are often called diorite-porphyrites; they differ from diorites in few respects except their porphyritic structure.
The hornblende of the porphyrites is often green but sometimes brown, resembling that of the lamprophyres, a group from which the porphyrites are separated by their containing phenocrysts of felspar, which do not occur in normal lamprophyres.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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