TY - JOUR
T1 - A new model of agate geode formation based on a combination of morphological features and silica sol-gel experiments
AU - Howard, Charles Brian
AU - Rabinovitch, Avinoam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 E.Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung.
PY - 2018/1/1
Y1 - 2018/1/1
N2 - Agates are unable to be reproduced in a laboratory environment, and hence the mechanism of their formation remains unknown. Present hypotheses regarding genesis are thus, inevitably, speculative. We describe novel experiments, at room temperature and pressure, producing banded amorphous silica gel (via a sol-gel transition) whose morphology is compared to that of agates. In addition, macro- and microscopic examination of agates from several sites revealed some distinctive physical features: surface pitting, indentations of the agate bands, the variation in morphologies of the bands, thinning and narrowing of the bands around the indentations and the escape tubes, shapes of the coloured impurities and persistence of the sharp angle of the bands at sector boundaries. These observations and experimental data lead us to conclude that agates can be formed in four stages: sol-gel transition with concomitant band formation, formation of escape tubes, rapid crystallization from multiple nucleation sites and late dissolution/recrystallization of the inner layers.
AB - Agates are unable to be reproduced in a laboratory environment, and hence the mechanism of their formation remains unknown. Present hypotheses regarding genesis are thus, inevitably, speculative. We describe novel experiments, at room temperature and pressure, producing banded amorphous silica gel (via a sol-gel transition) whose morphology is compared to that of agates. In addition, macro- and microscopic examination of agates from several sites revealed some distinctive physical features: surface pitting, indentations of the agate bands, the variation in morphologies of the bands, thinning and narrowing of the bands around the indentations and the escape tubes, shapes of the coloured impurities and persistence of the sharp angle of the bands at sector boundaries. These observations and experimental data lead us to conclude that agates can be formed in four stages: sol-gel transition with concomitant band formation, formation of escape tubes, rapid crystallization from multiple nucleation sites and late dissolution/recrystallization of the inner layers.
KW - Agate
KW - Band formation
KW - Morphology
KW - Petrogenesis
KW - Silica sol-gel precursor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85047070545&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1127/ejm/2017/0029-2685
DO - 10.1127/ejm/2017/0029-2685
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85047070545
SN - 0935-1221
VL - 30
SP - 97
EP - 106
JO - European Journal of Mineralogy
JF - European Journal of Mineralogy
IS - 1
ER -