
Bands of injection gneiss along the Highway 40/Interstate 70 corridor, between Golden and Morrison.
Gneiss Gallery
The Idaho Springs Batholith
The formation known as the Idaho Springs batholith, making up the foothills
west of Golden and Morrison, can be as much as 4,000 feet thick in places.
It is very old, having formed between 1.7 and 1.8 billion years ago. Much
of it is gneiss or various stages and forms of granite.
Granite can be composed of a number of minerals, although the most common
components are feldspar, quartz, and mica, or hornblende. Feldspar,
quartz, and mica, are, in turn, silicates, combinations of the
element silicon with oxygen. Feldspar is an aluminum silicate, formed from soda,
potash, or lime. Gneiss, (pronounced "nice"), composed of the same minerals as granite, is a form of
granitic rock, formally differentiated from granite, more by pattern or texture,
than by composition. It is characterized by parallel banding, known as
schistosity (highly developed in rocks classified as schists) or foliation.
The banding can range in size from barely visible parallel streaks to bands many
feet or yards across, illustrated by the pegamatitic intrusions, known as
injection gneiss.
Along the Highway 40/Interstate 70 corridor, south of
Golden, the alternating bands of orange and black rock give the appearance of a
multicolored waterfall. They range in size from a few inches to fifteen or
twenty feet across. Within these bands or the boulders and rocks scattered
nearby can be seen the more conventional gneiss patterns which distinguish them
from granite.
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