DescriptionImpala Black Granite (gabbronorite) Bushveld Complex.jpg
Impala Black Granite - an attractive, 2 billion year old gabbronorite from South Africa. It is composed principally of grayish plagioclase feldspar and black pyroxene. It comes from the famous Bushveld Complex, a world-class example of an LLI (large layered igneous province). LLIs often have economic concentrations of valuable metals, such as platinum and chromium. North America has one economically significant LLI - the Stillwater Complex of Montana.
The Bushveld has a thick stratigraphy that is well documented. The gabbronorite sample shown here comes from the upper Main Zone of the Rustenburg Layered Suite. It dates to the mid-Paleoproterozoic (2054-2061 million years). “Impala Black Granite” is quarried north of the town of Rustenburg in northeastern North West Province (= northwest of the city of Johannesburg), South Africa.
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