Dictionary Definition
porphyritic adj : (of rocks) consisting of
porphyry or containing large crystals in a fine groundmass of
minerals
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
porphyriticExtensive Definition
Porphyry is a variety of igneous rock
consisting of large-grained crystals, such as feldspar or quartz, dispersed in a
fine-grained feldspathic matrix
or groundmass. The larger crystals are called phenocrysts. In its
non-geologic, traditional use, the term "porphyry" refers to the
purple-red form of this stone, valued for its appearance.
The term "porphyry" is from Greek and
means "purple". Purple
was the color of royalty, and the "Imperial Porphyry" was a deep
brownish purple igneous rock with large crystals of plagioclase. This rock was
prized for various monuments and building projects in Imperial
Rome and later. Pliny's
Natural History affirmed that the "Imperial Porphyry" had been
discovered at an isolated site in Egypt in AD 18, by a Roman
legionnaire named Caius Cominius Leugas (Werner 1998). It came from
a
single quarry in the Eastern
Desert of Egypt, from 600
million year old andesite of the Arabian-Nubian
Shield. The road from the quarry westward to Qena (Roman
Maximianopolis) on the Nile, which Ptolemy put on his
second-century map, was described first by Strabo, and it is to
this day known as the Via Porphyrites, the Porphyry Road, its track
marked by the hydreumata, or
watering wells that made it viable in this utterly dry landscape.
Porphyry was extensively used in Byzantine imperial monuments, for
example in Hagia Sophia
and in the "Porphyra", the official delivery room for use of
pregnant Empresses in the
Great Palace of Constantinople.
After the fourth century the quarry was lost to
sight for many centuries. The scientific members of the French
Expedition under Napoleon sought
for it in vain, and it was only when the Eastern Desert was
reopened for study under Muhammad
Ali that the site was rediscovered by Burton and Wilkinson
in 1823.
Subsequently the name was given to igneous
rocks with large crystals. Porphyry now refers to a texture
of igneous rocks. Its chief characteristic is a large difference
between the size of the tiny matrix crystals and other much larger
crystals, called phenocrysts. 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 porphyrytic texture.
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 deep in
the crust, creating the large crystal grains, with a diameter of 2
mm or more. In the final stage, the magma is cooled rapidly at
relatively shallow depth or 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.
In history
As early as 1850 BC on Crete in Minoan Knossos there were large columns made of porphyry. All the porphyry columns in Rome, the red porphyry togas on busts of emperors, the porphyry panels in the revetment of the Pantheon, as well as the altars and vases and fountain basins reused in the Renaissance and dispersed as far as Kiev, all came from the one quarry at Mons Porpyritis ("Porphyry Mountain", the Arabic Jabal Abu Dukhan), which seems to have been worked intermittently between 29 and 335 AD, when Constantine I celebrated the founding of his capital Constantinople with a 30-meter (100') pillar, built of seven stacked porphyry drums, which still stands. A triumphant last use were the eight monolithic columns of porphyry that support exedrae (semicircular niches) in Hagia Sophia. Justinian's chronicler, Procopius, called the columns "a meadow with its flowers in full bloom, surely to make a man marvel at the purple of some and at those on which the crimson glows." (noted by Werner).Byzantine historians distinguish two sorts of
emperors: those who won power through a coup and those "born to the
purple". These porphyrogenites were
born to the imperial family in a room in
the Great Palace veneered with purple porphyry, as described by
Anna
Comnena, daughter of the eleventh century emperor Alexius
I.
The imperial family were entombed in the purple
as well, beginning with Nero, who was the
first to be immured in a porphyry sarcophagus. Roman sarcophagi
were re-used for imperial burials in Sicily: the porphyry
sarcophagi of Holy Roman Emperors
Frederick II and
Henry IV and king William
I of Sicily and the Empress Constance
are preserved in the cathedrals of Palermo and
Monreale.
The Romans used the Imperial porphyry for the
monolithic pillars of Baalbek's Temple
of Heliopolis in Lebanon. Today
there are at least 134 porphyry columns in buildings around Rome,
all reused from imperial times, since the stone is not naturally
present in Italy, and countless altars, basins and other
objects.
Porphyry was used extensively for decoration in
Germany,
Poland, and
Czechoslovakia.
This can be seen in the Mannerist style
sculpted portal outside the chapel entrance in Colditz
Castle.
Louis
XIV King of France obtained the
largest collection of porphyry by acquiring the Borghese
collection.
In 1840, Bonapartists
recovered the body of Napoleon I
from Saint Helena and intended to bury it in a porphyry sarcophagus
in Les
Invalides, Paris. However, the Egyptian quarry was not
available and a similar red quartzite from Finland was
chosen, in spite of its purchase from the Russian Empire, an enemy
of France.
Example Porphyries
- Dacite porphyry
- Trachyte/latite porphyry
- Diorite porphyry
- Granite porphyry
- Rhyolite porphyry
- basalt porphyry
- see also porphyritic texture
- see also list of rock textures
Rhomb porphyry
Rhomb porphyry is a volcanic
rock with gray-white large porphyritic rhomb shaped
phenocrysts enbedded
in a very fine grained red-brown matrix.
The composition of rhomb porphyry place it in the trachyte - latite classification of the
QAPF
diagram.
Rhomb porphyry lavas are known only from three
rift areas: The East
African Rift (including Mount
Kilimanjaro), Mount Erebus
near the Ross Sea in
Antarctica, and
the Oslo
graben in Norway.
References
External links
porphyritic in Catalan: pòrfid
porphyritic in German: Porphyr
porphyritic in Estonian: Porfüüriline
struktuur
porphyritic in Spanish: Pórfido
porphyritic in French: Porphyre (roche)
porphyritic in Italian: Porfido
porphyritic in Hebrew: פורפיר
porphyritic in Dutch: Porfier
porphyritic in Japanese: 斑岩
porphyritic in Norwegian: Rombe porfyr
porphyritic in Polish: Porfir
porphyritic in Portuguese: Pórfiro
porphyritic in Finnish: Porfyyri
porphyritic in Swedish: Porfyr