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The feldspars form the most abundant group of minerals in the crust
of the Earth and Moon and also occur in many meteo rites. They
playa fundamental role in all rock-forming processes at shallow
depths, but are rare or absent from the upper mantle. Their
detailed study is thus essential for the understan ding of such
varied processes as magma genesis and differentia tion,
metamorphism, al teration, erosion and sedimentation. This interest
is show by the fact that two previous NATO Advanced Study
Institutes on feldspars were held in Oslo in 1962 and in Manchester
in 1972. The feldspars are particularly sui table for detailed
studies, as they have very simple chemistry and develop some of the
most complex microstructures known. The microstructures are often
slow to form but are easily preserved, so that they are potentially
extremely informative about the geological history of the rocks in
which they occur. Furthermore, their study involves physical and
chemical methods of increasing sophistication so that the results
obtained are not always immediately understandable to research
workers outside the field of modern mineralogy. Progress in
knowledge about feldspars is probably slower in penetrating the
fields of petrology and geochemistry than that on other mineral
groups. For these reasons among others, i was particularly
appropriate to hold a third NATO ASI on feldspars approximately ten
years after the last one."
The feldspars form the most abundant group of minerals in the crust
of the Earth and Moon and also occur in many meteo rites. They
playa fundamental role in all rock-forming processes at shallow
depths, but are rare or absent from the upper mantle. Their
detailed study is thus essential for the understan ding of such
varied processes as magma genesis and differentia tion,
metamorphism, al teration, erosion and sedimentation. This interest
is show by the fact that two previous NATO Advanced Study
Institutes on feldspars were held in Oslo in 1962 and in Manchester
in 1972. The feldspars are particularly sui table for detailed
studies, as they have very simple chemistry and develop some of the
most complex microstructures known. The microstructures are often
slow to form but are easily preserved, so that they are potentially
extremely informative about the geological history of the rocks in
which they occur. Furthermore, their study involves physical and
chemical methods of increasing sophistication so that the results
obtained are not always immediately understandable to research
workers outside the field of modern mineralogy. Progress in
knowledge about feldspars is probably slower in penetrating the
fields of petrology and geochemistry than that on other mineral
groups. For these reasons among others, i was particularly
appropriate to hold a third NATO ASI on feldspars approximately ten
years after the last one."
One of the fundamental objectives of physical geochemistry is to
understand the evolution of geochemical systems from microscopic to
regional and global scales. At present there seems to be a general
recognition of the fact that internal properties of minerals record
important aspects of the evolutionary history of their host rocks
which may be unraveled by very fine scale observations. A major
focus in the development of geochemical research in the last thirty
years has been the application of classical thermodynamics to
reconstruct the conditions at which the states of quenched
mineralogical properties of rocks have equilibrated during the
course of their evolution. While these works have funda mentally
influenced our understanding ofthe physico-chemical history
ofrocks, in recent years petrologists, mineralogists, and
geochemists have been making greater efforts towards the
application of kinetic theories in order to develop a better
appreciation of the temporal details of geochemical processes. The
present volume brings together a variety of current research on
transport in systems of geochemical interest from atomic to outcrop
scales. A major theme is atomic migration or diffusion, and its
various manifestations on microscopic and macroscopic scales.
Transport in the solid state is controlled by diffusion and is
responsible for the states of atomic ordering and relaxation of
composi tional zoning in minerals, development of compositional
zoning during cooling, exsolution lamellae, and creep."
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