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Fact sheets

Concretions, Thunder Eggs and Geodes

What are Concretions?

Concretions are hard, compact accumulations of mineral matter that grow inside sedimentary rocks such as shale and sandstone or in some weathered volcanic rocks. The mineral matter concentrates locally in the host rock, cementing it together to form harder zones or nodules.

Shapes of Concretions

The odd shapes of concretions arouse curiosity and they can often be mistaken for fossils, bones, meteorites or other unusual objects. Concretions can have regular shapes like blocks, boxes, pipes, flat discs, canon balls, or even resemble parts of a human body such as a foot or rib. It is sometimes hard to believe that they formed by natural means. Ironstone concretions are common around Sydney, with its outcrops of iron-rich shale and sandstone. The following notes refer mainly to these ironstone concretions in shale and sandstone.

Formation of Concretions

The box-like shape of some ironstone concretions can often depend on the way a shale or sandstone bed breaks up into regular blocks of various sizes under the action of weathering. This separation takes place along natural planes of weakness in the rock such as horizontal bedding surfaces and vertical joints (cracks). Before and during this process of separation, ground water soaks in and circulates through the rock, the planes of weakness making it more porous.

In these ironstone concretions, ground water dissolves iron compounds from the inner portion of a block, then deposits them again as insoluble iron oxide-hydroxide in the outer parts, cementing together grains in the original rock to make that zone harder. There is often brown, yellow or red concentric ironstone banding within the block.

This process continues only while the rock is below the ground water level, but when this level drops, drying and oxidation takes place. Finally, concretions may be released from the surrounding softer rock through weathering, and because they are harder and more resistant, will be found as separate objects in the soil or on the ground. Eventually, erosion may wear down edges and corners forming a rounded shape.

Concretions can also form by building up of successive layers of material around a nucleus (sand grain, pebble, mineral crystal or a fossil). Ground water with dissolved iron, silicon, calcium or other chemicals will often drop these as iron oxide, calcium carbonate or silica solids when chemical conditions change, adding them a little at a time as a thin layer. Many such layers may build up, having different concentrations of the compounds, and sometimes showing different colours.

Hollow Concretions

Spherical concretion

Some concretions may be hollow, the centre being empty or filled with loose powdery clay or sand, or a detached hard lump resembling a nut. The loose powder shows that iron oxide formerly cementing the grains has been drawn away from the middle and towards the outside, contributing to the hard iron oxide shell. If the centre is empty, cracks have allowed the loose powder or dissolved material to escape.

If a loose 'nut' is present, there has been some internal shrinkage when the concretion dried out. Both outer shell and loose 'nut' may show banding. Sometimes the 'nut' can be heard rattling inside the concretion when it is shaken.

Thunder Eggs

Thunder egg

Thunder eggs are round agate-filled nodules which form in some types of silica-rich volcanic rocks eg. rhyolites. As the molten volcanic lava cooled, steam and other gases trapped in the lava formed an expanding bubble. Silica minerals often crystallise around the bubble or grow crystal fibres which radiate outwards from the its centre. These mineral-filled bubbles with a radiating structure are called spherulites.

Sometimes gas pressure can forced the spherulite apart to form a central hollow which is later filled with more minerals. Later drying out, shrinkage and cracking of silica gels or clays filling the cavity can produced the star-shaped pattern typical of many thunder eggs.

Later, silica-rich solutions may enter the cavity and fill it with banded agate, chalcedony, clear quartz crystals or amethyst. Solutions of different composition seep in at various times, leaving behind several layers of different minerals. Well-known localities for Australian thunder eggs are Mt. Hay, Eumundi, Agate Creek and Mt. Tamborine, Queensland

Geodes

Celestite

Geodes are hollow, crystal-lined globular rock cavities found in sedimentary rocks like limestone (calcium carbonate) and dolomite (calcium magnesium carbonate) or in volcanic rocks. In sedimentary rocks, geodes may form by dissolving out of cavities by ground water and redepositing of minerals as crystals which usually point towards the centre of the cavity.

They may also form in pre-existing concretions or in spaces left by expansion of the rock under internal fluid pressure. They often have an outer shell of chalcedony, a crystal lining of quartz, carbonates such as calcite or other minerals, and can be over a metre in diameter. Sedimentary geodes made of calcite and dolomite have been found in the Muswellbrook-Singleton area in New South Wales.

Volcanic Geodes

Agate Geode

Some volcanic lavas eg. basalts, have round or almond shaped gas holes, partially or completely filled with calcite, chalcedony, agate (banded chalcedony), crystallised colourless or amethyst quartz or other minerals. Ground waters carrying dissolved silica may seep into the lava cracks or cavities, depositing silica minerals. The agate and chalcedony were initially in a jelly-like state but hardened as they dried out. Examples have been found at Agate Creek, Monto and Murgon, Queensland; Narrabri, Boggabri, Merriwah, Werris Creek and Bellata, New South Wales and along the lower reaches of the Snowy River, Victoria.

References


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