USGS - science for a changing world

Mineral Resources On-Line Spatial Data

Mineral Resources > Online Spatial Data > Geology > by state

Geologic units containing migmatite

Earth material > Metamorphic rock > Gneiss
Migmatite
A composite "mixed rock" composed of igneous or igneous-appearing and metamorphic portions
Subtopics:
(none)

Alabama - Arizona - Colorado - Delaware - Idaho - Maine - Michigan - Minnesota - New Hampshire - New Jersey - Nevada - New York - Rhode Island - Tennessee - Washington - Wisconsin - Wyoming
Alabama
Dadeville Complex; Ropes Creek Amphibolite (Precambrian to Paleozoic)
Ropes Creek Amphibolite - layered and massive amphibolite; locally includes hornblende migmatite and ultramafic pods.
Wacoochee Complex; Phelps Creek Gneiss (Precambrian to Paleozoic)
Phelps Creek Gneiss - quartz monzonite to granite gneiss in dikes and sheets with wide migmatite zones at contacts.
Arizona
Early Proterozoic granitic rocks (Early Proterozoic)
Wide variety of granitic rocks, including granite, granodiorite, tonalite, quartz diorite, diorite, and gabbro. These rocks commonly are characterized by steep, northeast-striking foliation. (1600-1800 Ma)
Early Proterozoic metamorphic rocks (Early Proterozoic)
Undivided metasedimentary, metavolcanic, and gneissic rocks. (1600-1800 Ma)
Early Proterozoic metasedimentary rocks (Early Proterozoic)
Metasedimentary rocks, mostly derived from sandstone and shale, with minor conglomerate and carbonate rock. Includes quartz-rich, mostly nonvolcanic Pinal Schist in southeastern Arizona and variably volcanic-lithic sedimentary rocks in the Yavapai and Tonto Basin supergroups in central Arizona. (1600-1800 Ma)
Early Proterozoic metavolcanic rocks (Early Proterozoic)
Weakly to strongly metamorphosed volcanic rocks. Protoliths include basalt, andesite, dacite, and rhyolite deposited as lava or tuff, related sedimentary rock, and shallow intrusive rock. These rocks, widely exposed in several belts in central Arizona, include metavolcanic rocks in the Yavapai and Tonto Basin supergroups. (1650 to 1800 Ma)
Jurassic to Cambrian metamorphosed sedimentary rocks (Cambrian to Jurassic)
Highly faulted and folded rocks of units Jv, J_, and Pz, deformed and metamorphosed in Jurassic, Cretaceous and Tertiary time. This unit is restricted to west-central Arizona. (160-540 Ma)
Proterozoic granitic rocks (Proterozoic)
Undivided Early and Middle Proterozoic granitic rocks (units Xg and Yg). (1400-1800 Ma)
Colorado
Biotitic gneiss, schist, and migmatite (Proterozoic | Paleoproterozoic)
Locally contains minor hornblende gneiss, calc-silicate rock, quartzite, and marble. Derived principally from sedimentary rocks
Delaware
Wissahickon Schist (Paleozoic)
Wissahickon Schist - Dense micaceous schist, gneiss and migmatite.
Idaho
Granitoid intrusions, metasedimentary rocks, and migmatite, undivided; Cretaceous intrusions and Proterozoic host rocks, undivided; northern and central Idaho (Cretaceous to Early Proterozoic)
Mixed, highly altered and migmatitic rocks; derived from imbrication and dynamic events
Metamorphosed granodiorite, quartz monzonitek tonalite, quartz diorite; mostly Cretaceous orthogneiss and migmatite; northern and Atlanta batholith; margins of Bitterroot and Atlanta batholiths (Cretaceous)
Metamorphosed granitic intrusive rock; associated with pluton margins and stress areas.
Metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks, diorite, trondhjemite, and migmatite; Cretaceous to Jurassic quartz dioritic plutons in Mesozoic to Permian greenschist-facies rocks; western Idaho, Blue Mountains island-arc complex (Cretaceous to Permian)
Triassic and possibly Permian submarine metavolcanic rocks of west-central Idaho.
Mica schist, quartzite, migmatite, amphibolite; Middle to Early Proterozoic metamorphic rocks; northern Belt province, Spokane dome of Priest River metamorphic core complex (Middle Proterozoic to Early Proterozoic)
Precambrian, high-grade metamorphic rock; metasediment; kyanite-silimanite garnet-mica coarse-grained schist and gneiss; minor quartzite
Migmatite, or injection gneiss; Oligocene granite in Late Proterozoic metasedimentary rocks; south-central Idaho, Albion Range metamorphic core complex (Oligocene and Cambrian to Late Proterozoic, mixed)
Eocene intrusions including large granitic plutons and dike swarms of central Idaho
Migmatitic paragneiss, quartzite, orthogneiss, and amphibolite; Early Proterozoic to Late Archean metamorphic rocks; northern Belt province; Settlement antiform in Priest River metamorphic core complex (Early Proterozoic to Late Archean)
Precambrian, high-grade metamorphic rock; metasediment; kyanite-sillimanite garnet-mica coarse-grained schist and gneiss; minor quartzite
Peraluminous monzogranite, granodiorite, pegmatite, aplite, and migmatite; mostly Cretaceous intrusions of the Kaniksu batholithic assemblage, but with minor Eocene intrusions, undivided; northern Idaho (Cretaceous to Eocene)
Cretaceous plutons; felsic; as granite or quartz monzonite; probably includes unmapped older and younger crystalline bodies.
Quartz diorite, metasedimentary rock, metavolcanic rock, and migmatite; Cretaceous to Jurassic plutons in Triassic to Permian metamorphic host rocks, undivided; western Idaho (Cretaceous to Permian)
Mixed, highly altered and migmatitic rocks; derived from imbrication and dynamic events
Quartz diorite, tonalite, granodiorite, orthogneiss, migmatite; Cretaceous to Jurassic quartz dioritic plutons; western Idaho, Blue Mountains island-arc complex (Early Cretaceous to Late Jurassic)
Lower Cretaceous to Upper Jurassic intrusions in west-central Idaho.
Maine
Devonian - Silurian undifferentiated sedimentary rocks in areas of extreme migmatization (Devonian - Silurian)
Devonian - Silurian undifferentiated sedimentary rocks in areas of extreme migmatization
Ordovician - Cambrian Penobscot Formation extensively migmatized area (Ordovician - Cambrian)
Ordovician - Cambrian Penobscot Formation extensively migmatized area
Michigan
Migmatitic gneiss and amphibolite (Late to Early Archean) (Archean)
Migmatitic gneiss and amphibolite (Late to Early Archean) - Varied gneisses of mostly unknown age in cores of gneiss domes and fault-bounded uplifts (Archean gneiss terranes). Except for the Watersmeet dome (Late to Early Archean), all dated rocks are Late Archean. Includes granite of Late Archean age that transgresses gneisses and amphibolite.
Minnesota
Granite-rich migmatite (Late Archean)
Granite-rich migmatite - Granitic gneiss, paragneiss, schist, and migmatite in the Vermillion Granitic Complex, and other parts of extreme northern Minnesota. Grades into granitoid rocks.
Paragneiss and schist-rich migmatite (Late Archean)
Paragneiss and schist-rich migmatite - Grades into undivided metasedimentary rocks (unit Ams).
New Hampshire
Massabesic Gneiss Complex (Late Proterozoic)
Massabesic Gneiss Complex - Quartzose-feldspathic gneiss and biotite schists (locally rusty), granofels, and cal-silicate rocks closely intruded by, and grading into, a pink gneissic granite (623 Ma) that produced a migmatite.
Massabesic Gneiss Complex (Late Proterozoic)
Massabesic Gneiss Complex - Migmatite consisting of pink, foliated biotite granite intruding gneissic and granulose metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks in southeastern New Hampshire.
Migmatitic rocks (Devonian - Silurian)
Migmatitic rocks - Formations unidentifiable owing to obliteration of original sedimentary or volcanic characteristics by anatexis or by numerous intrusions.
Rye Complex (Ordovician? - Late Proterozoic?)
Rye Complex - Light-colored to gray schists and gneisses, quartzites, and amphibolites. Variably migmatized and mylonized. Contact with Kittery Formation on west is the Portsmouth Fault.
Rye Complex (Ordovician? - Late Proterozoic?)
Rye Complex - Migmatite of gray, foliated, sheared or mylonitized two-mica granite and pegmatite, minor hornblende-biotite diorite, intruding metapelites and metavolcanic rocks in southeastern New Hampshire.
Rye Complex, Breakfast Hill Granite of Novotny (1964). (Ordovician? - Late Proterozoic? )
Breakfast Hill Granite of Novotny (1964) - Blastomylonitic quartz-feldspar granitic gneiss and pegmatite intruded the Rye Complex and formed a migmatite.
New Jersey
Gneiss granofels and Migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Gneiss granofels and Migmatite - Gneiss and granofels range in composition from felsic to intermediate to mafic; intermediate compositions predominate. Contains a wide variety of rock types including graphitic schist and marble. Many rocks were injected by a granitoid that has blue quartz and augen of potassic feldspar and are arteritic migmatites. One body of gneiss contains a 1 m by 0.5 m (3 by 2 ft) phacoid of gabbro that is interpreted to be an olistolith. Unit probably represents a sequence of meta-sedimentary and metavolcanic rocks that have been heavily injected and migmatized by felsic magma.
Migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Migmatite - Mixed rock consisting of amphibolite containing veins, lenses, layers, and irregular clots of albite-oligoclase granite or microperthite alaskite.
Wissahickon Formation (Lower Cambrian and Late Proterozoic)
Wissahickon Formation - Fine- to medium-grained biotite-quartz-plagioclase schist and gneiss that contains thin amphibolite layers. Schist and gneiss in alternating layers suggest a turbidite sequence of shale and graywacke. The rocks are at high metamorphic grade, and, in places, the more pelitic parts have partly melted forming veins of migmatite. Some exposures show evidence of polymetamorphism as micaceous minerals occur both within the schistosity and as static porphyroblasts.
Nevada
Metamorphic rocks (Early Proterozoic)
METAMORPHIC ROCKS-Gneiss and schist and lesser amounts of gneissic granite, pyroxenite, hornblendite, migmatite, pegmatite, and marble.
New York
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss - locally pyroxenic; commonly with subordinate leucogranitic gneiss, biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, other metasedimentary rocks, amphibolite, migmatite. Amphibolite with porphyroblasts of K-feldspar locally prominent in northwest Adirondacks. Overprint signifies inequigranular texture or phacoidal structure. In northwest Adirondacks, grades into Yphg.
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss - locally pyroxenic; commonly with subordinate leucogranitic gneiss, biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, other metasedimentary rocks, amphibolite, migmatite. Amphibolite with porphyroblasts of K-feldspar locally prominent in northwest Adirondacks. In northwest Adirondacks, grades into Yphg.
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss - locally pyroxenic; commonly with subordinate leucogranitic gneiss, biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, other metasedimentary rocks, amphibolite, migmatite. Amphibolite with porphyroblasts of K-feldspar locally prominent in northwest Adirondacks. Overprint signifies inequigranular texture or phacoidal structure. In northwest Adirondacks, grades into Yphg.
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite and/or hornblende granite gneiss - locally pyroxenic; commonly with subordinate leucogranitic gneiss, biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, other metasedimentary rocks, amphibolite, migmatite. Amphibolite with porphyroblasts of K-feldspar locally prominent in northwest Adirondacks. Overprint signifies inequigranular texture or phacoidal structure. In northwest Adirondacks, grades into Yphg.
Biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, amphibolite, and related migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite-quartz-plagioclase gneiss, amphibolite, and related migmatite - locally sillimanitic; commonly garnetiferous in and adjacent to Adirondack Highlands.
Biotite-quartz-plagioclase paragneiss, amphibolite, and related migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Biotite-quartz-plagioclase paragneiss, amphibolite, and related migmatite - locally sillimanitic; commonly garnetiferous in and adjacent to Adirondack Highlands.
Charnockite, granitic and quartz syenite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Charnockite, granitic and quartz syenite gneiss - variably leucocratic, containing varying amounts of hornblende, pyroxenes, biotite; may contain interlayered amphibolite, metasedimentary gneiss, migmatite. Overprint signifies inequigranular texture or phacoidal structure.
Charnockite, granitic and quartz syenite gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Charnockite, granitic and quartz syenite gneiss - variably leucocratic, containing varying amounts of hornblende, pyroxenes, biotite; may contain interlayered amphibolite, metasedimentary gneiss, migmatite. Overprint signifies inequigranular texture or phacoidal structure.
Leucogranitic (alaskitic) gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Leucogranitic (alaskitic) gneiss - sodic plagioclase ranges from generally subordinate to locally dominant; locally with biotite, hornblende, pyroxene, garnet, sillimanite, disseminated magnetite; commonly contains metasedimentary layers, amphibolite, migmatite; plagioclase-rich variety is host to magnetite ore bodies in eastern Adirondacks.
Leucogranitic gneiss (Middle Proterozoic)
Leucogranitic gneiss - sodic plagioclase ranges from generally subordinate to locally dominant; locally with biotite, hornblende, pyroxene, garnet, sillimanite, disseminated magnetite; commonly contains metasedimentary layers, amphibolite, migmatite; plagioclase-rich variety is host to magnetite ore bodies in eastern Adirondacks.
Undivided metasedimentary rock and related migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Undivided metasedimentary rock and related migmatite.
Undivided metasedimentary rock and related migmatite (Middle Proterozoic)
Undivided metasedimentary rock and related migmatite.
Rhode Island
Blackstone Group - undifferentiated rock (Late Proterozoic? or older?)
Blackstone Group - undifferentiated rock - Consists of associations of the above rock types. Locally cut by granitic rocks of the Esmond Igneous Suite, resulting in migmatitic appearance. Includes rock mapped formerly as undifferentiated Blackstone Series and migmatite.
Tennessee
Cranberry Granite (Precambrian)
Cranberry Granite - Complex of intertonguing rock types including migmatite, granitic gneisses, monzonite, quartz diorite, greenstone, mica and hornblende schists, abundant granitic pegmatite.
Mount Rogers Group including Bakersville Gabbro, Beech Granite, Cranberry Granite, and Roan Gneiss (Precambrian)
Mount Rogers Group - Metavolcanics, typically purplish and reddish; massive lavas and tuffs, altered rhyolites and quartz latites; strongly foliated; interbedded arkose, shale, and conglomerate. Thickness 1,000 to 3,000 feet; Includes Bakersville Gabbro - Metagabbro, dark, porphyritic; contains diorite, basalt, anorthosite, and diabase; occurs as thin to massive dikes and lenticular masses; Beech Granite - Granite, porphyritic, light-gray to reddish; coarse potash feldspar crystals and clustered interstitial mafics (chloritized biotite and hornblende) give spotted appearance; includes Max Patch Granite; Cranberry Granite - Complex of intertonguing rock types including migmatite, granitic gneisses, monzonite, quartz diorite, greenstone, mica and hornblende schists, abundant granitic pegmatite; and Roan Gneiss - Layered hornblende and garnet gneiss and granitic migmatite with zones of mica schist and amphibolite, foliation commonly contorted; contains numerous granitic and gabbroic dikes.
Roan Gneiss (Precambrian)
Roan Gneiss - Layered hornblende and garnet gneiss and granitic migmatite with zones of mica schist and amphibolite, foliation commonly contorted; contains numerous granitic and gabbroic dikes.
Washington
Mesozoic granitic rocks, undivided (Mostly Cretaceous-Jurassic)
Granite, quartz monzonite, quartz diorite, granodiorite, and trondhjemite. Includes diorite in southeastern Washington; diorite and gabbro near Concunully in Okanogan County; gneiss, schist, and migmatites in areas of Chelan, Colville, and Okanogan batholiths. Includes high-grade metamorphic rocks of Precambrian age in Spokane area.
Pre-Upper Jurassic gneiss (Mostly Cretaceous)
Biotite, quartz diorite, trondhjemite, and hornblende gneisses, many of which are migmatitic; includes small granitic bodies locally. Small areas of mica schist, marble, amphibolite, and lime-silicate rocks in Entiat Mountains area of Chelan County.
Pre-Upper Jurassic metamorphic rocks of the medium and high-grade zone (Early Jurassic-Triassic)
Schist, amphibolite, and minor lime-silicate rocks, marble, quartzite, and metaconglomerate.
Wisconsin
Gneiss, migmatite, and amphibolite (about 2800 Ma) (Late Archean)
Gneiss, migmatite, and amphibolite (about 2800 Ma) - Quartzofeldspathic gneiss and less abundant amphibolite and migmatite. Includes granitoid rocks. Granitic gneiss at Port Edwards, WI on Wisconsin River has a U-Pb zircon age of 2870 +/- 13 Ma, and gneiss at Jim Falls in Chippewa River valley has a U-Pb zircon age of 2522 +/- 22 Ma (Sims and others, 1989)
Wyoming
Oldest gneiss complex (Archean)
OLDEST GNEISS COMPLEX--Chiefly layered granitic gneiss, locally migmatitic. Local masses of quartzite, metagraywacke, iron-formation, and other metasedimentary rocks and amphibolite and felsic gneiss thought to be volcanic; metasedimentary rocks in Beartooth Mountains contain detrital zircon dated at more than 3,400 Ma. Inclusions show evidence of granulite-facies metamorphism prior to 2,800 Ma. Mueller and others (1982) suggest that large areas in Beartooth Mountains were invaded by Late Archean granite (age about 2,800 Ma). Bighorn Mountains--Dates of metamorphism 3,000+ Ma.
Oldest gneiss complex (Archean)
OLDEST GNEISS COMPLEX--Chiefly layered granitic gneiss, locally migmatitic. Local masses of quartzite, metagraywacke, iron-formation, and other metasedimentary rocks and amphibolite and felsic gneiss thought to be volcanic; metasedimentary rocks in Beartooth Mountains contain detrital zircon dated at more than 3,400 Ma. Inclusions show evidence of granulite-facies metamorphism prior to 2,800 Ma. Mueller and others (1982) suggest that large areas in Beartooth Mountains were invaded by Late Archean granite (age about 2,800 Ma). Wind River Range--Includes large bodies of metagabbro. Overprint pattern indicates area of migmatite related to emplacement of 2,600-Ma granite.

Accessibility FOIA Privacy Policies and Notices

Take Pride in America logo USA.gov logo U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey
URL: http://mrdata.usgs.gov/geology/state/sgmc-lith.php?text=%20migmatite
Page Contact Information: pschweitzer@usgs.gov
Page Last modified: 11:56 on 09-Apr-2013