Economic Geology Of Perlite Production In New Mexico

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Richard M. Chamberlin
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
24
File Size:
1581 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1994

Abstract

Perlite is an altered rhyolitic glass with 2 to 5 wt % water that expands or "pops" when heated quickly to plasticity while evolving steam to form lightweight, glass foam. Commercial perlite deposits in New Mexico are well-developed zones of chemical weathering (hydration) superimposed on highly permeable and thick glassy zones at the chilled upper surface and toes of high-silica-rhyolite lava flows and lava domes. The maximum tonnage of glass in these volcanoes was predetermined by their unique eruptive histories. New Mexico perlite production (80% of US production of 571,00 st) is mostly from the 3.9 Ma high-silica-rhyolite lava flows at the No Agua Peaks volcanic center. The primary vent at No Agua is defined by a 900 ft-high rubidium-rich composite lava dome, known as West Peak, that contains minor perlite reserves. Slightly less rubidium-rich lava squeezed out from under the west flank of the dome to form relatively thin (250 ft) but highly vesicular lobate flows that now consist of about 50 % recoverable perlite. Finally, rubidium-poor lavas were extruded from a radial dike on the northeast flank of the dome. These thicker (400 ft) flow lobes contain about 20 % recoverable perlite. The largest mass of lava does not always contain the most perlite. The thinner (west) flow at No Agua yields the largest perlite reserves rather than the large composite lava dome or thicker (east) flow.
Citation

APA: Richard M. Chamberlin  (1994)  Economic Geology Of Perlite Production In New Mexico

MLA: Richard M. Chamberlin Economic Geology Of Perlite Production In New Mexico. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1994.

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