×

Tachylite
Tachylite

Skarn
Skarn



ADD
Compare
X
Tachylite
X
Skarn

Tachylite and Skarn

Add ⊕
Definition

Definition

Origin

Discoverer

Etymology

Class

Sub-Class

Group

Other Categories

Texture

Texture

Color

Maintenance

Durability

Water Resistant

Scratch Resistant

Stain Resistant

Wind Resistant

Acid Resistant

Appearance

Uses

Interior Uses

Exterior Uses

Other Architectural Uses

Construction Industry

Medical Industry

Antiquity Uses

Commercial Uses

Types

Types

Features

Monuments

Famous Monuments

Sculpture

Famous Sculptures

Pictographs

Petroglyphs

Figurines

Fossils

Formation

Formation

Mineral Content

Compound Content

Metamorphism

Types of Metamorphism

Weathering

Types of Weathering

Erosion

Types of Erosion

Properties

Hardness

Grain Size

Fracture

Streak

Porosity

Luster

Compressive Strength

Cleavage

Toughness

Specific Gravity

Transparency

Density

Specific Heat Capacity

Resistance

Reserves

Asia

Africa

Europe

Others

North America

South America

Australia

 
Tachylite is a vitreous form of basaltic volcanic glass. This glass is formed naturally by the rapid cooling of molten basalt
Iceland
Unknown
From German Tachylite, from tachy- + Greek lutos soluble, melting
Igneous Rocks
Durable Rock, Medium Hardness Rock
Volcanic
Coarse Grained Rock, Fine Grained Rock, Medium Grained Rock, Opaque Rock
 
Vitreous
Black, Dark Brown
More
Durable
Glassy
 
Decorative Aggregates, Interior Decoration
As Building Stone, As Facing Stone, Garden Decoration, Paving Stone
Curbing
Cutting Tool, Knives, Landscaping, Scrapers
-
Artifacts
Cemetery Markers, Creating Artwork
 
Volcanic glass
Available in Lots of Colors and Patterns, Clasts are smooth to touch
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Absent
 
Tachylite is a fine-grained, hard rock which is a type of metasomatite, essentially altered basalt. It forms with or without crystallization, either below the surface as intrusive rocks or on the surface as extrusive rocks.
Feldspar, Olivine
Fe, Mg
Burial Metamorphism, Cataclastic Metamorphism, Contact Metamorphism, Hydrothermal Metamorphism, Impact Metamorphism, Regional Metamorphism
Biological Weathering, Chemical Weathering, Mechanical Weathering
Chemical Erosion, Sea Erosion, Water Erosion, Wind Erosion
 
5.5
Medium to Fine Coarse Grained
Conchoidal
Vermilion
Less Porous
Resinous
206.00 N/mm2
-
-
2.4
Opaque
3.058 g/cm3
0.56 kJ/Kg K
Heat Resistant, Impact Resistant, Wear Resistant
 
Cambodia, Russia, South Korea
East Africa
England, Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Scotland, Sweden
Hawaii Islands
USA
-
Victoria
 
Skarns are formed during regional or contact metamorphism and from a variety of metasomatic processes involving fluids of magmatic, metamorphic, and/or marine origin
USA, Australia
Tornebohm
From an old Swedish mining term originally used to describe a type of silicate gangue or waste rock.
Metamorphic Rocks
Durable Rock, Hard Rock
-
Fine Grained Rock, Opaque Rock
 
Earthy, Mud-rich, Rough
Black, Brown, Green, Grey, White
Less
Durable
Dull
 
Decorative Aggregates, Entryways, Interior Decoration
As Building Stone, As Facing Stone, Garden Decoration, Paving Stone
Curbing
As a Flux in the Production of Steel and Pig Iron, As a Sintering Agent in Steel Industry to process Iron Ore, As Dimension Stone, Gold and Silver production, Manufacture of Magnesium and Dolomite Refractories
-
Artifacts, Monuments, Sculpture
Creating Artwork, Gemstone, Jewelry, Metallurgical Flux, Source of Magnesia (MgO)
 
Endoskarns
Host Rock for Lead, Zinc and Copper Deposits
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Absent
 
Due to change in environmental conditions, rocks are heated and pressurized deep inside the Earth's surface. Skarn is formed from the extreme heat caused by magma or by the intense collisions and friction of tectonic plates.
Calcite, Enstatite, Epidote, Garnet, Magnetite, Pyroxene, Titanite
Au, CaO, Carbon Dioxide, Cu, Fe, MgO
Burial Metamorphism, Cataclastic Metamorphism, Contact Metamorphism, Hydrothermal Metamorphism, Impact Metamorphism, Regional Metamorphism
-
-
 
6.5
Fine Grained
Irregular
Light to dark brown
Less Porous
Waxy and Dull
70.00 N/mm2
Slaty
2.4
2.86
Opaque
2.8-2.9 g/cm3
0.92 kJ/Kg K
Heat Resistant
 
China, India, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Sri Lanka
South Africa, Western Africa
United Kingdom
-
Canada
Brazil, Colombia, Paraguay
Central Australia, Western Australia

All about Tachylite and Skarn Properties

Know all about Tachylite and Skarn properties here. All properties of rocks are important as they define the type of rock and its application. Tachylite and Skarn belong to .Texture of Tachylite is whereas that of Skarn is . Tachylite appears and Skarn appears . The luster of Tachylite and Skarn is . Tachylite and Skarn are available in colors. The commercial uses of Tachylite and Skarn are .