peridotite xenolith in vesicular phonotephrite from the San Carlos Volcanic Field, Arizona - teaching hand specimen
A xenolith is a piece of country rock introduced into a magma during an eruption or emplacement of a batholith. These xenoliths represent fragments torn at depth from a peridotite rock mass through which the phonotephrite magma was forced. Their granular texture resulted from multiple crystallization nuclei. The vesicular phonotephrite that contains these xenoliths erupted in the Middle Pleistocene ~580,000 years ago and caps Peridot Mesa on the San Carlos Apache Reservation east of Globe, Arizona. In these xenoliths, the pale lime green is forsterite olivine, the black grains are spinel and the uncommon emerald green grains are chromian diopside pyroxene. Olivine is the name given to a group of minerals with the general composition of A2SiO4. The A is usually Fe or Mg, but it can be Ca, Mn or Ni. A complete solid-solution series exists, with the composition of most olivine somewhere between Forsterite (Mg2SiO4) and Fayalite (Fe2SiO4), so the formula for olivine is often given as (Mg