Rodingite
File:Rodingite from Maryland USA - Smithsonian Rock Sample 1.jpg]]
Rodingite is a metasomatic rock composed of grossular-andradite garnet, calcic pyroxene, vesuvianite, epidote and scapolite.{{cite book |last1=Fettes |first1= Douglas |last2= Desmons |first2=Jacqueline |date= 2007|title=Metamorphic Rocks - A Classification and Glossary of Terms|publisher=Cambridge University Press}} Rodingites are common where mafic rocks are in proximity to serpentinized ultramafic rocks. The mafic rocks are altered by high pH, Ca2+ and OH− fluids, which are a byproduct of the serpentinization process, and become rodingites.{{Cite journal|last1=Laborda-López|first1=Casto|last2=López-Sánchez-Vizcaíno|first2=Vicente|last3=Marchesi|first3=Claudio|last4=Gómez-Pugnaire|first4=María Teresa|last5=Garrido|first5=Carlos J.|last6=Jabaloy-Sánchez|first6=Antonio|last7=Padrón-Navarta|first7=José A.|last8=Hydas|first8=Károly|year=2018|title=High-P metamorphism of rodingites during serpentinite dehydration (Cerro del Almirez, Southern Spain): Implications for the redox state in subduction zones|journal=Journal of Metamorphic Geology|volume=36|issue=9 |pages=1141–1173|doi=10.1111/jmg.12440|bibcode=2018JMetG..36.1141L |doi-access=free|hdl=10261/214213|hdl-access=free}}{{Cite journal|last1=Salvioli-Mariani|first1=Emma|last2=Boschetti|first2=Tiziano|last3=Toscani|first3=Lorenzo|last4=Montanini|first4=Alessandra|last5=Petriglieri|first5=Jasmine Rita|last6=Bersani|first6=Danilo|year=2020|title=Multi-stage rodingitization of ophiolitic bodies from Northern Apennines (Italy): Constraints from petrography, geochemistry and thermodynamic modelling|journal=Geoscience Frontiers|volume=11|issue=6 |pages=2103–2125|doi=10.1016/j.gsf.2020.04.017|bibcode=2020GeoFr..11.2103S |doi-access=free}} The mineral content of rodingites is highly variable, their high calcium, low silicon and environment of formation being their defining characteristic.{{cite book |last1=Python |last2=Marie |last3=Masako |last4=Yoshikawa|last5=Tomoyuki Shibata |last6=Shoji Arai|date=2011 |title=Dyke swarms: Keys for geodynamic interpretation |location= Berlin, Heidelberg |publisher=Springer |pages=401–435 |bibcode=2011dskg.book.....S }} Rodingites are common in ophiolites, serpentinite mélanges, ocean floor peridotites and eclogite massifs. Rodingite was first named from outcrops of the Dun Mountain Ophiolite Belt in the Roding River, Nelson, New Zealand.{{cite journal | last1 = Johnston | first1 = M. R. | year = 2007 | title = Nineteenth-century observations of the Dun Mountain Ophiolite Belt, Nelson, New Zealand and trans-Tasman correlations | url = http://sp.lyellcollection.org/content/287/1/375.abstract | journal = Geological Society, London, Special Publications | volume = 287 | issue = 1| pages = 375–387 | doi=10.1144/sp287.27| bibcode = 2007GSLSP.287..375J | s2cid = 129776536 }}
An obsolete name for rodingite is granatite.
File:Metasomatized dyke in serpentinite Nelson New Zealand.jpg
References
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