Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica

P(論文) The Yamato Sanmyaku is a mountain range located at about 200km south of the Prins Harald Kyst, East Antarctica. The range forms an arcuate chain, extending 50km north-south, comprising seven massifs temporarily named A, B, C, D, E, F and G. The rocks of the area are divided into a charnockitic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: キザキ, コウシロウ, KIZAKI, Koshiro
Language:English
Published: 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/55/files/KJ00002367948.pdf
id ftnipr:oai:nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000055
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnipr:oai:nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000055 2024-09-09T19:07:08+00:00 Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica キザキ, コウシロウ KIZAKI, Koshiro 1965-09 application/pdf https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/55/files/KJ00002367948.pdf eng eng JARE scientific reports. Ser. C, Geology 3 1 27 AA00246753 https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/55/files/KJ00002367948.pdf 1965 ftnipr 2024-06-17T04:02:24Z P(論文) The Yamato Sanmyaku is a mountain range located at about 200km south of the Prins Harald Kyst, East Antarctica. The range forms an arcuate chain, extending 50km north-south, comprising seven massifs temporarily named A, B, C, D, E, F and G. The rocks of the area are divided into a charnockitic group (pyroxene gneisses and pyroxene syenites) and a granitic group (migmatitic gneisses, granitic gneiss, and microcline granites). In addition, metabasite interlayers and metadikes are found everywhere, associated with microcline pegmatites. The charnockitic group is involved in the older complex which crystallized under the conditions of a granulite facies. It has been partly modified by later granitization related to the granitic group which itself shows various stages of granitization. The grade of metamorphism increases towards the north, parallel to the gneissosity. The intercalated metabasite layers correspond to the host rocks in mineral paragenesis. Basic dikes are intruded obliquely into both the granitic gneisses and the pyroxene syenites, and are metamorphosed into various metabasites under the conditions of an amphibolite facies. This metamorphism is probably related to the subsequent intrusion of microcline granites and associated microcline pegmatite. A thrust movement from east to west represents the last stage of the structural evolution. departmental bulletin paper Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctica East Antarctica Prins Harald Kyst National Institute of Polar Research Repository, Japan East Antarctica Prins Harald Kyst ENVELOPE(36.000,36.000,-69.500,-69.500) Yamato ENVELOPE(35.583,35.583,-71.417,-71.417) Yamato Sanmyaku ENVELOPE(35.750,35.750,-71.500,-71.500)
institution Open Polar
collection National Institute of Polar Research Repository, Japan
op_collection_id ftnipr
language English
description P(論文) The Yamato Sanmyaku is a mountain range located at about 200km south of the Prins Harald Kyst, East Antarctica. The range forms an arcuate chain, extending 50km north-south, comprising seven massifs temporarily named A, B, C, D, E, F and G. The rocks of the area are divided into a charnockitic group (pyroxene gneisses and pyroxene syenites) and a granitic group (migmatitic gneisses, granitic gneiss, and microcline granites). In addition, metabasite interlayers and metadikes are found everywhere, associated with microcline pegmatites. The charnockitic group is involved in the older complex which crystallized under the conditions of a granulite facies. It has been partly modified by later granitization related to the granitic group which itself shows various stages of granitization. The grade of metamorphism increases towards the north, parallel to the gneissosity. The intercalated metabasite layers correspond to the host rocks in mineral paragenesis. Basic dikes are intruded obliquely into both the granitic gneisses and the pyroxene syenites, and are metamorphosed into various metabasites under the conditions of an amphibolite facies. This metamorphism is probably related to the subsequent intrusion of microcline granites and associated microcline pegmatite. A thrust movement from east to west represents the last stage of the structural evolution. departmental bulletin paper
author キザキ, コウシロウ
KIZAKI, Koshiro
spellingShingle キザキ, コウシロウ
KIZAKI, Koshiro
Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
author_facet キザキ, コウシロウ
KIZAKI, Koshiro
author_sort キザキ, コウシロウ
title Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
title_short Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
title_full Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
title_fullStr Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Geology and Petrograpby of the Yamato Sanmyaku, East Antarctica
title_sort geology and petrograpby of the yamato sanmyaku, east antarctica
publishDate 1965
url https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/55/files/KJ00002367948.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(36.000,36.000,-69.500,-69.500)
ENVELOPE(35.583,35.583,-71.417,-71.417)
ENVELOPE(35.750,35.750,-71.500,-71.500)
geographic East Antarctica
Prins Harald Kyst
Yamato
Yamato Sanmyaku
geographic_facet East Antarctica
Prins Harald Kyst
Yamato
Yamato Sanmyaku
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Prins Harald Kyst
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Prins Harald Kyst
op_relation JARE scientific reports. Ser. C, Geology
3
1
27
AA00246753
https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/record/55/files/KJ00002367948.pdf
_version_ 1809821194259529728