Manhattan Schist

In the first part of yesterday’s post, Oh, Schist!, I mentioned that schist’s alignment of platy minerals created planes of weakness in the rock, but that in some cases, schist can be a very strong rock. Meet the Manhattan schist.

The Manhattan schist formed from mud deposited on the ocean floor and scraped in continental collisions during the formation of Pangaea over 450 - 300 million years ago. These collisions, part of the Taconic Orogeny, created a mountain chain taller than the Himalayas, and squeezed and baked the rocks under high pressure and temperature forming the Manhattan schist. In New York, you can build very high skyscrapers on the Manhattan schist.

Why is the Manhattan schist so strong? It has to do with the mineralogy and the internal structure. The unit is characterized by a lack of internal layering, the presence of tough black amphibole, and of wear-resistant garnet, kyanite, and sillimanite. The last two minerals are metamorphic grade index minerals, and indicate the Manhattan schist was exposed to very high pressure and temperature.

Enjoy this outcrop of the folded and scraped Manhattan schist in Central Park, Manhattan from: https://geologypics.com/manhattan-schist-and-skyscrapers-of-ny-city/ by @MarliMiller

#ManhattanSchist #TaconicOrogeny #rocks #geology #ScienceMastodon

Manhattan Schist and skyscrapers of NYC

Manhattan Schist and skyscrapers of New York City, New York, (City-22)

Geology Pics
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller In the summer of '99 I was due to start studying earth science but first went on a 1 week trip to NY. I distinctly remember looking at this exact schist (might even be this particular outcrop and wondering about it, thinking my upcoming courses might clear things up a little. I wasn't wrong.
@MBoodenAK @MarliMiller Love that, Mathijs! No matter how much you know about it still 
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller I've never been to New York, but its metamorphic geology has always added to its allure for me! 😊
@FaithfullJohn @MarliMiller Yes, on the bucket list! Thanks, John!

@vickyveritas @FaithfullJohn @MarliMiller
The picture is interesting to me. I visited NY just once as a 9 year old & collected a bit of mica schist from Central Park. The sparkling mica fascinated me & I kept for years, until my mother finally threw it out when I left home.

I grew up to be a geologist, so there you go 🙂. It was all due to New York.

@geomannie @FaithfullJohn @MarliMiller I love your story, Bob! Thank you for sharing it.

@vickyveritas @FaithfullJohn @MarliMiller Native New Yorker here. I've always been fascinated by the rocks exposed by road cuts.

A good resource for this is "Roadside Geology of New York", by Bradford Van Diver.
https://adk.org/product/roadside-geology-of-ny/

Roadside Geology of NY | Adirondack Mountain Club

Roadside Geology of NY

Adirondack Mountain Club | Explore. Educate. Protect.
@xris @FaithfullJohn @MarliMiller Love the Roadside Geology books! Another for the collection! Thank you!
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller
I so wish I'd been paying more attention to geology earlier in life when I traveled around the country a good bit! Alas, the interest didn't come until later in life. Thanks for these interesting observations and stories!
@AndyLowry @MarliMiller It’s never too late! Thanks, Andy. Glad you enjoy them.
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller Here in the Philadelphia area, we have the very pretty, sparkly Wissahickon schist, which is surely the most fun to say of almost all the rocks there are.

@TheParsley @MarliMiller Looks like chocolate chip cookie dough, only those aren’t chocolate chips :) Delicious, Anne! My new favorite word, Wissahickon…Thank you, Anne (with an E)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wissahickon_Formation#/media/File%3AMineral_sample_from_Wissahickon_Creek.jpg

Wissahickon Formation - Wikipedia

@vickyveritas @MarliMiller Love this, thanks. I once at a picnic on/beside this outcrop
@JuliePosselt @MarliMiller A lovely spot near the roots of long-gone ancient mountains :) Thanks, Julie!
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller @colarusso_algo Lots of garnets in the mica schist in Perthshire, Scotland. No idea if that is at all relevant to the post - just wanted to show off!
@vickyveritas @MarliMiller 2017 Oroville Dam spillway failure pulverizing a green schist deposit.
@BellTreeJim That was scary. It feels almost like a miracle that the dam didn't fail as well.