Novaculite

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Novaculite forms light grey flatirons in the Marathon Uplift area of Texas. Novaculite Flatirons Marathon Uplift.JPG
Novaculite forms light grey flatirons in the Marathon Uplift area of Texas.

Novaculite, also called Arkansas Stone, is a microcrystalline to cryptocrystalline rock type that consists of silica in the form of chert or flint. It is commonly white to grey or black in color, with a specific gravity that ranges from 2.2 to 2.5. It is used in the production of sharpening stones. It occurs in parts of Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Texas, as well as in Japan and parts of the Middle East. The name novaculite is derived from the Latin word novacula, meaning a sharp knife, dagger, or razor, [2] in reference to its use in sharpening. The first recorded use of the term whetstone was in reference to a honing stone from Arkansas. [3]

Contents

Occurrence

Novaculite beds are present in the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma, and in the Marathon Uplift and Solitario regions of Texas. Novaculite is very resistant to erosion and the beds stand out as ridges in the Ouachita Mountains. [1] There are also occurrences in Japan, Syria, Lebanon, and Israel. [4]

Origin

The novaculite beds of the south-central United States were deposited in the Ouachita Geosyncline, a deep-water marine trough, during Silurian to early Mississippian time. Sedimentation consisted primarily of siliceous skeletal particles of marine organisms such as sponge spicules and radiolaria, and very fine-grained, wind-blown quartz particles; there was very little argillaceous sedimentation during novaculite deposition. [5] The novaculite beds were later subjected to folding and uplift, and probably low-grade metamorphism, during the Ouachita orogeny in early Pennsylvanian time. [1]

Use

Novaculite spalls (flakes) from knapping. GVFKAStoneToolCraftsmanShowNovaculiteSpalls.jpg
Novaculite spalls (flakes) from knapping.

Because novaculite is very hard and dense, it has been mined since prehistoric times, first for use as arrow and spear points, and later to make sharpening stones. Novaculite-rich sharpening stones from Arkansas are called Arkansas stones; [6] stones produced in the Ottoman empire (Syria, Lebanon, and Israel) were called Turkey stones; [4] and novaculite stones were also produced in Japan. [4]

The weathered upper strata of Arkansas novaculite, known as tripoli or "rotten stone", are rich in silica and have found a niche market as a performance additive or filler in the coatings, adhesives, sealants, and elastomer industries. Tripoli is mined just east of Hot Springs, Arkansas by the Malvern Minerals Company. [3]

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Chert is a hard, fine-grained sedimentary rock composed of microcrystalline or cryptocrystalline quartz, the mineral form of silicon dioxide (SiO2). Chert is characteristically of biological origin, but may also occur inorganically as a chemical precipitate or a diagenetic replacement, as in petrified wood.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Permian Basin (North America)</span> Large sedimentary basin in the US

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The Blakely Sandstone is a Middle Ordovician geologic formation in the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma. First described in 1892, this unit was not named until 1909 by Albert Homer Purdue in his study of the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas. Purdue had initially named this unit the Caddo Shale at a 1907 Geological Society of America meeting, but later redefined and renamed the unit as the Ouachita Shale. He again renamed the unit to the Blakely Sandstone in a letter to Edward Oscar Ulrich, to which Ulrich used in a 1911 publication, becoming the first reference using this name. Ulrich assigned the Blakely Mountain in Garland County, Arkansas as the type locality, but did not designate a stratotype. As of 2017, a reference section for this unit has yet to be designated.

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The geology of Montana includes thick sequences of Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic sedimentary rocks overlying ancient Archean and Proterozoic crystalline basement rock. Eastern Montana has considerable oil and gas resources, while the uplifted Rocky Mountains in the west, which resulted from the Laramide orogeny and other tectonic events have locations with metal ore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arkoma Basin</span> Geological feature in the United States

The Arkoma Basin is a peripheral foreland basin that extends from central west Arkansas to south eastern Oklahoma. The basin lies in between the Ozark Uplift and Oklahoma Platform to the north and Ouachita Mountains to the south and with an area of approximately 33,800 mi2. Along the southern edge of the basin, the Choctaw Fault is the boundary that separates the mountains from the basin itself. This basin is one of seven that lie along the front of the Ouachita and Appalachian mountain systems. This basin is Oklahoma's fourth largest in terms of natural gas production. Oil has been extracted locally, but not on a commercial scale. Coal was the first natural resource used commercially within the basin. Surface mapping of coal seams in the early part of the 20th century lead to the discovery of sub-surface features that indicated the presence of natural gas. Mansfield, Arkansas was the site of the first natural gas discovery in 1902.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Spearing, Darwin V. (1991). Roadside Geology of Texas . Mountain Press Publishing Company. ISBN   0-87842-265-X.
  2. Wiktionary. "Novacula". Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  3. 1 2 Nichols, John C., Minerals on the Ouachita National Forest, USDA Forest Service 12 May 2008
  4. 1 2 3 Adam Cherubini (12 October 2011). "What is an Oilstone?". Popular Woodworking magazine. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  5. McBride, E.F. and Thomson, A. 1970. The Caballos novaculite, Marathon region, Texas. Geological Society of America, Special Paper 122, 129. p.
  6. Trubitt, Mary Beth. "Arkansas Novaculite: A Virtual Comparative Collection". Arkansas Archeological Survey. Archived from the original on 10 November 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2013.