Sunday, March 24, 2019
River Rock
[I originally wrote this in February 2012, but never posted this series on the local geology. The pictures are still worth seeing.]
River rock is one of those terms used everywhere in the country that everyone knows what means and no one defines. Generally, it’s rock that has a relatively smooth surface. I say relatively, because its not as smooth as a polished tombstone, but it’s not jagged.
If you ask for something more specific, people take the adjective smooth and turn it into a verb. There the trouble begins, because they start to say things like "the erosive action of the moving water from a river smooths and shapes the stones. Other times, they say something slightly romantic like "smooth surfaces created by tumbling around in rivers for years."
Maybe, elsewhere in the country. Here, even when the Rio Grande is running high, like it was in the above picture take last October under the Griego bridge in Española, the water only creates rapids. You don’t see rocks being tossed about. More likely you see them laying outside the action where silt can filter through them.
Smoothing and polishing are not the same thing. The second is done by removing material, often by breaking large pieces into smaller ones. In a rock tumbler, the polishing is done by some kind of abrasive grit, something like silicon carbide, with water used as a facilitating lubricant, not as the active agent . The winds here move sand at high enough velocities to blast surfaces.
The above is a piece of granite I found in the area of the far arroyo this weekend. Part has striations that left a relatively smooth surface. The darker corner at the top of the picture below was untouched. There the smoothed section has a lighter color because the abrasion removed the tops of the softer, darker mica, but harder flecks of quarts remained.
The smoothing of river rocks is done by filling in rough surfaces with finer sand that drops when the river currents slow. It often is the same general material loosened by wind and deposited in the water. Eventually the sand becomes welded to the surface, like a rind.
I first noticed this with a bit of granite I picked up somewhere along route 554 north of Ojo Caliente last fall. You can see the brown outer skin is very different than the quartz and mica inner stone. If you look carefully, you can see the outer layer isn’t uniform in thickness, but penetrates in low edges to fill the rough places. That’s what creates the coarse textured, smooth feeling exterior surface.
If the river rocks were polished by removal, they’d look more like tombstones or the stone above. Instead, they look like amorphous potatoes. Round, formless, grey lumps.
Someone broke the above rock outside a near neighbor’s drive. Since he works for Cook’s Transit Mix, I assume the rock came from somewhere just north of Española. You can just see the lighter colored outer layer that built up around the granite, especially on the lower curve in the upper left had corner.
Last weekend my immediate neighbor had loads of sand brought into our shared drive by a friend of his who said it came from his yard in Velarde. A broken piece of granite filled with quartz and mica landed near my gate.
Again, you can see the boundary between pock marked grey shell and the uneven texture of the broken face. It may looked like it’s been smoothed by removal, but if you look closely you can see the uneven fill that protects the bright interior with a dull overcoat. In places it has even started to colonize the surface.
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