Knotenschiefer

Knotenschiefer is a variety of spotted slate characterized by conspicuous subspherical or polyhedral clots that are often individual minerals such as cordierite, biotite, chlorite, andalusite and others.[1]

Knotenschiefer containing andalusite
Knotenschiefer from Głuchołazy, Oppa Mountains, Poland

Like fleckschiefer, fruchtschiefer and garbenschiefer, knotenschiefer is a variety of contact metamorphic slate. It is formed at temperatures of around 400 °C and its dark coloration is caused by graphite. Fruchtschiefer occurs at 500 °C. Knotenschiefer is characterised by small nodules, up to one centimetre in size, and nodular deposits of mica as a result of the growth in grain size during metamorphism. The nodules consist of iron minerals, carbon substances and mica; as the metamorphic temperature rises, minerals such as andalusite or chiastolite increasingly occur.

References

  1. Bucksch, Herbert (1997). Dictionary of Geotechnical Engineering, Vol. 2., Springer-Verlag, Berlin. ISBN 3-540-58163-4.
  • Walter Maresch, Olaf Medenbach: Steinbachs Naturführer. Gesteine. S. 252. Mosaik Verlag, München 1987, ISBN 3-576-10699-5.
  • Fleckschiefer. Otto Lueger: Lexikon der gesamten Technik und ihrer Hilfswissenschaften. Bd. 4, Stuttgart, Leipzig 1906, S. 82.


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