Speckled mystery rock

Do you know what causes these speckles in a mafic lava rock? These rock samples are from La Palma (Canary Islands) and appear to be basanite or olivine-phyric basalt. This is no quiz question. I don’t know the answer but hopefully someone with more experience has seen such rocks before.


Width of sample approximately 30 cm.

Width of sample 8 cm.

10 comments to Speckled mystery rock

  • Lockwood

    My first thought was leucite, but they don’t really appear to be discrete crystals.

  • Leucite is interesting offer. However, they really do not resemble crystals. They are like some embryonic crystals or crystallization centers or something like that. Really confusing for me. I did take a look with a microscope but it did not reveal much. Just a gray patch which slightly seemed like an airy light-weight material but the internal texture was really too fine to say anything for sure.

  • Ron Schott

    I’d hypothesize that this is some sort of glomerocrystic texture, possibly with plagioclase crystals forming the glomerocrysts. I’ve seen glomeroporphyritic textures in basalt before, and I’ve seen a similar “spotted” texture in amphibolites, but this is a first for me, too. Ideally I’d like to see a thin section to test my hypothesis.

  • Glomerocryst is a new word for me but it seems to me now that it may be the answer indeed. Thanks, Ron!

  • Lockwood

    Definitely think a thin section is in order. If these are indeed glomerocrysts, it’ll be obvious under a petrog scope.

  • I will take thin section into my plans.

  • Marek Cichanski

    I”ll bet the hypothesis of `glomerocrystic’ texture is right; that sounds pretty plausible. They also remind me of devitrification features, such as the `snowflakes’ in snowflake obsidian. I think your blog is very readable and informative, BTW – I really enjoy reading it!

  • Thanks, Marek! I will do my best to keep it readable and informative.

  • Piet Vierbergen

    This rock is in my opinion a basanite with a clear erosion appearance called “Sonnenbrenner”. Many alkali-olivinbasalts show this phenomenon. The main cause is the sparsely occuring analcime in this rock which is attracting water. After several years this dark rock with little spots of olivine ( forsterite) – you can see this bleaching green mineral in the photograph below – is falling down into little fragments in order to become a believed topsoil.

  • Yes, it is indeed quite fragmental. I discovered it when I tried to prepare it for a thin section. I cut a slice of it with a rock saw and to my disappointment discovered that it is too friable for a thin section. However, I have not given up yet. There are some solutions for such rocks like epoxy to keep it together.

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