'Dunite' (
IPA: ) is an
igneous, plutonic
rock, of
ultramafic composition, with coarse-grained or
phaneritic texture. The
mineral assemblage is typically greater than 90%
olivine with minor
pyroxene and
chromite. Dunite is the olivine-rich end-member of the
peridotite group of mantle-derived rocks. Dunite and other peridotite rocks are considered to represent the Earth's
mantle. Dunite is rarely found within continental rocks, but where it is found, it typically occurs at the base of
ophiolite sequences where slabs of mantle rock from a
subduction zone have been thrust onto
continental crust by
obduction during continental or
island arc collisions (
orogeny). It is also found in alpine peridotite massifs that represent slivers of sub-continental mantle exposed during collisional orogeny. Dunite typically undergoes retrograde
metamorphism in near-surface environments and is altered to
serpentinite and
soapstone.
Dunite may represent the refractory residue left after the extraction of
basaltic magmas in the upper mantle. This is the type of dunite found in the lowermost parts of ophiolites, alpine peridotite massifs, and
xenoliths. Dunite may also form by the accumulation of olivine crystals on the floor of large basaltic or
picritic magma chambers. These "
cumulate" dunites typically occur in thick layers in
layered mafic intrusions, associated with cumulate layers of
wehrlite, olivine
pyroxenite,
harzburgite, and even chromitite (a cumulate rock consisting largely of chromite). Small layered intrusions may be of any geologic age, for example, the
Triassic Palisades sill in New York and the larger
Eocene Skaergaard complex in Greenland. The largest layered mafic intrusions are tens of kilometers in size and almost all are
Proterozoic in age, e.g., the
Stillwater complex (Montana), the
Muskox intrusion (Cananda), and the
Great Dyke (Zimbabwe). Cumulate dunite may also be found in ophiolite complexes, associated with layers of wehrlite, pyroxenite, and
gabbro.
Dunite was named by the Austrian geologist,
Ferdinand von Hochstetter in
1859 after
Dun Mountain near
Nelson,
New Zealand. Dun Mountain was given its name because of the dun colour of the underlying ultramafic rocks. This color results from surface
weathering that
oxidizes the iron in olivine in temperate climates (weathering in tropical climates creates a deep red soil). Dun Mountain is separated from its sister massif, Red Mountain, at the southern end of South Island, New Zealand, by the
Alpine Fault, an approximately 600 km long (?) right lateral
strike slip fault similar to the
San Andreas fault in California.
A massive exposure of dunite in the United States can be found as the
Twin Sisters Peaks, near
Mt. Baker, in the northern
Cascade Mountains of Washington State.
References
★
Dunite
★ Blatt, Harvey and Robert J. Tracy, 1996, ''Petrology'', 2nd ed., W. H. Freeman, ISBN 0-7167-2438-3