Geology of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia district, Georgia

GEORGIA STATE DIVISION OF CONSERVATION
DEPARTMENT OF MINES, MINING AND GEOLOGY
GARLAND PEYTON, Director THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
Bulletin No. 61
GEOLOGY OF THE STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT,
GEORGIA
By Leo Anthony Herrmann
ATLANTA 1 9 5 4

LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
Department of Mines, Mining and Geology
Atlanta, April 15, 1954 To His Excellency, Herman E. Talmadge, Governor Commissioner Ex-Officio of State Division of Conservation Sir:
I have the honor to submit herewith Georgia Geological Survey Bulletin No. 61, "Geology of the Stone MountainLithonia District, Georgia".
This report was prepared by Dr. Leo A. Herrmann as a Doctor's thesis in geology at The Johns Hopkins University. It represents a thorough and original investigation of one of Georgia's most important granite districts. Thus, its publication will be welcomed by our granite producers and by all who are interested in the science of granite.
Very respectfully yours,
GARLAND PEYTON Director
III

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CONTENTS

Page

ABSTRACT ---------------------------

---------------XV

INTRODUCTION ---------------------------- ----------------------

1

Purpose of the ReporL __________ . __________________ _

1

Location of the District .. _________ ------------------------- __ _

1

Physiography ---------------------------------------------------------------

2

Weathering --------------------------------------- --------------------- __________ _ 3

Previous Work ------------------------------------------------------------------- 6

Present Study ---------------------------------------------------------------- 6

Acknowledgments -------------------------------------------------------------- 7

PETROGRAPHY _________________________ _

8

Migmatite ---------------------------------- .. ----------------- _

8

Lithonia gneiss ____________________ _

8

Metamorphic Rocks ________________________ --------------------- . _

15

General statement _____________ _

15

Distribution ---------------------------------------------------------

17

Garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite __ .___

17

Biotite gneiss ----------------------- ---------------------------- ... 19 Muscovite-quartz schist _____ .. ... ------------- ____ ___ __ 20

Amphibolite ---------------------------- _________________ ...... _____ 20

Biotite-hornblende gneiss ......

_ ----------

26

Porphyroblastic biotite gneiss _ ....... __

27

Minor rock types ________________ .. ... . .. __________

28

Igneous Rocks _... ---------- __ ---- __ ...... ________

29

Stone Mountain granite (quartz-monzonite) _

29

Pegmatite dikes _____________________

-------------

32

Aplite dikes __________________________________ --------------- ... ....

33

Diabase dikes ---------------------------------------------------- -

33

Alluvium __________________________________ ... __. . ..... ______ .____ .___ ....

33

STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY ---------------------------------- .. ..

34

Structures of the Lithonia Gneiss. ___ ------------

34

Banding _____________________________________________ ._____________ ..... _____ .__ _ 34

Garnetiferous layers --------------------------------------- __________ 34 Flow fo1ds ________________________________________________________________ .__ __ _ 34

Ptygmatic folds ----------------------------------------------------- ____ . 35
Shear zones --------------------------------------------------------- ___________ 36 Mica lineation ______ ... ----- ____ ____ ____ __ ______ ____________ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ _ 38 Joints __ .. _______________________ ._____________ .. ______________________ .. ___ ______ __ 39

Structures of selected exposures of the Lithonia gneiss 41

v

CONTENTS

Page

Structures of the Metamorphic Rocks________________________________ 43

Schistosity ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 Foliation -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 Banding -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 43 Compositional layering -------------------------------------------------- 48 Minor folds ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 48 Longitudinal folds ____________________________________________________ :_____ 50

Undulatory folds ------------------------------------------------------------ 52 Transverse folds ------------------------------------------------------------ 52 Crenulations -------------------------------------------------------------------- 52 Lineations ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 52 Faults ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 54 Joints ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 55 Structures of the Stone Mountain Granite (quartz-monzonite) --------------------------------------- ____ ________ ___ 55 Flow structures -------------------------------------------------------------- 55 Xenoliths ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 57 Tourmaline clusters -------------------------------------------------------- 60 Joints ________ ------------------ ___ ___ __ ______________________ _________ __ __ ______ __ _ 60
Relationship of Structures to Deformation________________________ 62

General statement ------------------------------------------------------- ___ 62 Coordinates of deformation____________________________________________ 62 Major axis of uplift________________________________________________________ 62
Minor axes of uplift________________________________________________________ 62

Mica lineation ------------------------------------------------------------- ___ 63 Shear zones -------------------------------------------------------------------- 63 Joints ___________________ ___ ____ ________ _________ ____ _________ __ ___ ______ ______ _____ 63

Relationship of Igneous Intrusions to Deformation__________ 64
Petrofabric Analysis ---------------------------------------------------------- 64 Method ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 61 Fabric diagrams ------------------------------------------------------------ 65 Discussion ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 65

PETROGENESIS -------------------------------------------------------------------- 68 Origin of the Lithonia Gneiss____________________________________________ 68
General statement ---------------------------------------------------------- 68 Banding and garnetiferous layers _________ :________________________ 68
Potash metasomatism ---------------------------------------------------- 70 Migmatization ---------------------------------------------------------------- 71 Origin of the Amphibolites____________________________________________________ 73

VI

CONTENTS

Page

General statement ---------------------------------------------------------- 73 Igneous origin ---------------------------------------------------------------- 74
Sedimentary origin -------------------------------------------------------- 7-J Origin of the Biotite-Hornblende Gneiss__________________________ 75 Origin of the Stone Mountain Granite ______________________________ 75

METAMORPHISM ---------------------------------------------------------------- 76 General Statement -------------------------------------------------------------- 76 Staurolite-Kyanite Subfacies -------------------------------------------- 76 Sillimanite-almandine Subfacies -------------------------------------- 76 Mineralogical Changes During Progressive Metamorphism ---------------------------------------------------------------- 76 Causes of Metamorphism____________________________________________________ 77
GEOLOGICAL HISTORY AND CONCLUSIONS________________ 78
THE STONE INDUSTRY________________________________________________________ 80
History -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 80 Types of Stone____________________________________________________________________ 83
Stone Mountain granite (quartz-monzonite)________________ 83
Lithonia gneiss ---------------------------------------------------------------- 84 Panola granite ---------------------------------------------------------------- 85 Physical Characteristics of Granite and Gneiss________________ 85 General statement ---------------------------------------------------------- 85 Hardness ........---------------------------------------------------------------- 86 Crushing strength ---------------------------------------------------------- 86 Structure ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 86 Texture ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 87 Mineral composition ------------------------------------------------------ 87 Color -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 87 Quarrying Methods ------------------------------------------------------------ 88 Building stone --'------------------------------------------------------------- 88 Crushed stone ---------------------------------------------------------------- 89 Uses of Stone________________________________________________________________________ 89
DESCRIPTION OF QUARRIES____________________________________________ 90
General Statement -------------------------------------------------------------- 90 Stone Mountain Granite (quartz-monzonite) __________________ 91
DeKalb County -------------------------------------------------------------- 91 Block Quarry ___ ----------------------------------------------------------- 91 Britt Quarry ---------------------------------------------------------------- 91 Coffey Quarries ---------------------------------------------------------- 92

VII

CONTENTS

Page

Edwards Quarry -------------------------------------------------------- 92 Ethel Quarry -------------------.------------------------------------------- 92 Flat Rock Quarry__ ------------------------------------------------------ 93 Kellogg Quarry ---------------------------------------------------------- 94 Robertson Quarry ------------------------------------------------------ 94 Sexton Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------ 94 Smith Quarry -------------------------------------------------------------- 95 Venable Estate Quarries____________________________________________ 95

Wells Quarry __ . ------------------------------------------------------ 95

Gwinnett County ------------------------------------------------------------ 96

Campbell Property ---------------------------------------------------- 96

Panola Granite ______ ------------------------------------------------------ 96

DeKalb County _

__ ------------------------------------------------ 96

Bowers Quarry ------------------------------------------------------- 96

Rockdale County ------------------------------------------------------------ 96 Hog Mountain Property______________________________________________ 96

Lithonia Gneiss ------------------------------~----------------------------------- 97 DeKalb County _____________________________o________________________________ 97

Brand Quarries ______ ------------------------------------------------ 97 Chapman Quarry -------------------------------------------------------- 97 Clack Quarries __________ -------------------------------------------------- 97 Coffey Quarries ---------------------------------------------------------- 98 Consolidated Quarry Corporation______________________________ 98

Cooper Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------102 Davidson Granite Company________________________________________ 102
Big Ledge Quarry______________ ,_____________________________________ 105 Pine Mountain Quarry_________________________________________ 106

Arabia Mountain and Bradley Mountain

Quarries --------------------------------------------------------------106 North Georgia Quarries_________________________________________ 107

Davis Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------ 107

DeKalb County Quarry

. ____________

108

Elliot Quarries __ ___ __ _ __ _____ ____________ _

108

Gaines Quarry ______ __ __ __________________ _

___ 108

Hammock Quarry

__ _______________ ___ __ __ ___ ____ 109

Hayden Quarry __________ ---------------------------------- ________ .10D

Haygood Quarry ---------------------------------------109 Hutchens Quarry ______ _ . --------------------------------------- .110 Johnson Quarry __________________________________________________________ 110
Johnston Quarry ______________________________________________ 110

VIII

CONTENTS

Page

McClendon Quarries __________________________________________________ 111 McMayer Quarry ________________________________________________________ 111

Park Quarry ----------------------------------------------------------------111 Plunkett Quarries ______________________________________________________ 111 Powell Quarries __________________________________________________________ 112 Reagin Quarries __________________________________________________________ 112

Scales Quarries ----------------------------------------------------------113 Smith Quarries ____________________________________________________________ 113 Turner Quarry ____________________________________________________________ 113 Wilson Quarry ____________________________________________________________ 113

Gwinnett County ------------------------------------------------------------114 Britt Quarry ________________________________________________________________ 114 Byrd Quarry ________________________________________________________________ 111
Gwinnett County Quarry____________________________________________ 114

Hayes Quarry --------------------------------------------------------------115 Johnson Property ------------------------------------------------------115 Johnston Quarries ------------------------------------------------------115 Jones Quarry ______________________________________________________________ 116

Kelley Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------116 McCart Quarry __________________________________________________________ 116

McConnell Quarry ------------------------------------------------------116 Moon Quarries ------------------------------------------------------------11'l Sawyer Quarry ----------------------------------------------------------117 Woodruff Quarry ______________________________________ _-_______________ 117

Yancy Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------117 Rockdale County ------------------------------------------------------------118
Almond Quarry ---------------------------------------------------------.118 Beadie Property ----------------------------------------------------------118 Brooks Quarries ----------------------------------------------------------118 Calloway Quarry --------------------------------------------------------118 Farmer Quarry _______ ---------------------------------------------------118 Johnston Quarry ________________________________________________________ 119

Mahoney Quarry --------------------------------------------------------119 Norton Quarry _---------------------------------------------------------- 119
Pirkle Quarry --------------------------------------------------------------119 Reagin Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------120 Rockdale County Quarry__________________________________________ 120

Shaw Quarry ------------------------------------------------------------- 120 Sims Quarry _______________________________________________________________ 120

Whittaker Quarry ------------------------------------------------------121

IX

CONTENTS

Page

Walton County --------------------------------------------------------------121 Carter Quarry -----------------------------,~------------------------------121 Cown Quarry ______________________________________________________________121
Forrester Quarry --------------------------------------------------------121 Guthrie Quarry __________________________________________________________121
McCuller Quarry --------------------------------------------------------121 Rockmore Quarry ------------------------------------------------------122 Windsor Bridge Quarry______________________________________________ 122 Yancy Quarry ______________-______________________________________________122

GLOSSARY ----------------------------------------------------------------------------123 LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS______________________128
REFERENCES ------------------------------------------------------------------------129

Plate

LIST OF PLATES

1. Geology and Structure of the Stone MountainLithonia District, Georgia____________________________________In Pocket

2. Geologic structure sections__________________________________In Pocket

3. Lineation map of the Stone Mountain- Lithonia District, Georgia --------------------------------------------------In Pocket
4. Structure of the Lithonia gneiss in the vicinity of Little Stone Mountain______________________________________In Pocket

5. Detailed structures of the Lithonia gneiss in the vicinity of Little Stone Mountain__________________ Page 45

6. Detailed structures in the Litho-nia gneiss at the DeKalb County Quarry________________________________ Page 47

7. Petrofabric diagrams ------------------------------------------ Page 67
8. Quarry map of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia District, Georgia __________________________________________________In Pocket

X

CONTENTS

Figure

LIST OF FIGURES

Page

1. Index map showing location of the Stone MountainLithonia District ----------------------------------------------------------- _ 1

2. Stone Mountain viewed from the northeast__________________ 2

3. Amphibolite layers in biotite gneiss, weathered to saprolite -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4

4. Elliptical weathering pits on the surface of Stone Mountain. Dark bands due to staining. Notebook gives scale ------'--------------------------------------------------------------- 5

5. Garnetiferous layer within the Lithonia gneiss at Little Stone Mountain, faulted and offset several feet ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9

6. Aplite layer (vein) parallel to biotite-rich band. Col-
linsville Mountain, south of Little Stone Mountain. Sketched on polished surface ________________________________________ 10

7. Muscovite replacing oligoclase with associated epidote and calcite. Crossed nicols. X40 __________________________ 11
8. Microcline replacing oligoclase. Crossed nicols. X15.. 11
9. Garnet porphyroblasts replacing quartz and oligoclase. Parallel light. X40______________________________________________ 11
10. Secondary albite at boundary of oligoclase and microcline. Crossed nicols. X40 ____________________________________ 12
11. Range in weight percentage and anorthite content of plagioclase from various phases of the Lithonia gneiss ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 14
12. Augen mica gneiss__________________________________________________________ 18

13. Slightly rounded sphene grains in amphibolite. Polarized light. X40____________________________________________________________ 22

14. Talc-actinolite-chlorite schist showing the develop-
ment of "knots" (augen) on the weathered surface. .O:J:J.e mile N40E of Bermuda__________________________________________ 25

15. sln'an art'desine porphyroblast in porphyroblastic biotite gneiss. Crossed nicols. X40 ____________________________________ 28

XI

Figure

CONTENTS

Page

16. Attenuated, faulted and rotated garnetiferous layers in the Lithonia gneiss_________________________________________________ 35

17. Shear zone in building block of the Lithonia gneiss.
Displacement of banding and aplite vein approximately four inches _________________________________________________________ 36

18. Compass rose diagram of the strike of one hundred and twenty-two shear zones in the Lithonia gneiss ______ 37
19. Strike and plunge of seventy-five mica lineations plotted in the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection. Contours 1-3-5-10-20-22% _________________________ 39

20. Plan view of a small quarry on the west flank of Mile Rock ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 40
21. Close up of drag-folded layer in the Lithonia gneiss ___ 41

22. DeKalb County quarry one-half mile north of Little Stone Mountain ----------------------------------------------------- ___ 42
23. Interlayering of gneiss, schist and amphibolite in saprolite exposure ------------------------------------------------------- _ 48

24. Lenses of mica schist and amphibolite in biotite

gneiss in saprolite exposure_____________________________ ___

49

25. Small folds in muscovite quartzite ________________________________ 49

26. Folded biotite gneiss and amphibolite in saprolite exposure -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 50

27. Small area N50W of Arabia Lake____________________

51

28. Crenulations in amphibolite___________________________________________ 53

29. Strike and plunge of one hundred and ninety-five mica lineations in the metamorphic rocks. Lower hemisphere of equal area projection. Contours 1-25-10-12% ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 53
30. Small thrust fault in tightly folded quartzite and mica schist. Four hundred yards north of Klondike ____ 55
31. Strike and dip of four hundred joints in the metamorphic series, plotted in the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection. Contours 1-3-5-6% --------"'---- 56

XII

Figure

CONTENTS

Page

32. Small quarry on the northwest side of Stone Mountain --------------------"------------------------------------------------------------- 57
33. Mica autoliths in the Stone Mountain granite______________ 58

34. Mica autolith containing a large tourmaline crystaL__ 59

35. Angular xenolith of biotite gneiss in the Stone Mountain granite ----------------------------------------------------- ______________ 59

36. Interlayered biotite gneiss and amphibolite xenolith (Gn) in Stone Mountain granite (SMgr) ______________________ 60

37. Tourmaline clusters concentrated in a zone parallel to the foliation of granite ________________________________________________ 61

38. Variation diagram showing the change in feldspar content between several phases of the Lithonia gneiss. Ratio of oligoclase: microcline recalculated to 100% -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 72
39. Homogeneous granite dike intruded into the Lithonia gneiss at the Big Ledge Quarry______________________________________ 73

40. Flat Rock Quarry, one-half mile north of Stone Mountain ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 93
41. No. 1 quarry, Rock Chapel Mountain____________________________ 99

42. Side dump trucks used by the Consolidated Quarry Corporation --------------------------------------------------------------------101
43. South portion of Big Ledge Quarry________________________________ 105

XIll

CONTENTS

Table

LIST OF TABLES

Page

1. Modes of the several rock types constituting the Lithonia gneiss in weight percent______________________________________ 13

2. Chemical analyses of hornblende gneisses____________________ 23

3. Modal analyses of pyroxene-hornblende gneiss and epidote-hornblende gneiss in weight percent______________ 24

. 4. Optical properties of hornblendes________________________________ 24

5. Modes of the Stone Mountain granite in weight percent ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 31
6. Chemical analyses of the evenly banded phase of the Lithonia gneiss ------------------------------------------------------------- ___ 71
7. Chemical analysis of a Carboniferous shale__________________ 75

XIV

ABSTRACT
The rocks of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia District are weathered to a red or brown saprolite except for portions of the Lithonia gneiss and Stone Mountain granite which form monadnocks. Stone Mountain is the most prominent monadnock in the area.
The metamorphic rocks of the district have been deformed into northwest trending transverse folds which are perpendicular to a regional northeast trending axis of uplift. A pronounced mica lineation, the axes of small folds, and elongated garnet porphyroblasts are parallel to the axes of the transverse folds. Two sets of shear zones were developed in the Lithonia gneiss during deformation; a pronounced set trends about N20E and a less pronounced set trends about N40W.
The Stone Mountain granite (quartz-monzonite) intruded the Lithonia gneiss and the metamorphic. rocks. Flow structures were developed in the Stone Mountain granite during its intrusion. These include flowage foliation, mica fluctuation about an axis of rotation, and parallel orientation of micaceous autoliths.
The Lithonia gneiss was highly migmatized by concordant, syntectonic aplite intrusions which altered the rock into a biotite granite-gneiss. Relic bedding remains in the rock in the form of quartz-rich garnetiferous layers which are usually conformable with the gneissic banding.
Amphibolite layers are conformable with the banding of the enclosing gneisses. The amphibolites have the composition of meladiorite, but show no evidence of intrusive origin. They are probably either volcanic or sedimentary in origin.
The metamorphic rocks of the district were regionally metamorphosed to the level of the staurolite-kyanite subfacies of the amphibolite facies. In addition, the rocks immediately surrounding the Lithonia gneiss were progressively metamorphosed to the level of the sillimanite-almandine subfacies. The boundary between the two subfacies is marked by the change from epidote to diopside in the amphibolites.
The age of the metamorphic rocks is considered to be preCambrian. The Lithonia gneiss was apparently migmatized
XV

during or shortly after the final deformation of the metamorphic rocks. This deformation may have taken place in the early stages of the Appalachian Revolution. Perhaps during a late stage of the Appalachian orogeny, the Stone Mountain granite (Permian?) was intruded. Diabase dikes were intruded in Triassic time along northwesterly trending breaks.
The last two sections of the report describe the stone industry and quarries of the district.
XVI

GEOLOGY OF THE STONE MOUNTAINLITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

INTRODUCTION
PURPOSE OF THE REPORT
This report has been written to add to the store of geologic information concerning the Georgia Piedmont. A short history of the stone industry and a section describing the quarries of the district are also included in order to bring up to date the information contained in the comprehensive report by Watson on The Granites and Gneisses of Georgia (1902).
LOCATION OF THE DISTRICT
The Stone Mountain-Lithonia district lies between 33 37' 23" and 33 50' north latitude, and 84 01' 20" and 84 10' west longitude. The geologic map (Plate 1) covers an area

85

84

83

.35--=- T IY._ly.~ ~c.--_-....-------,------____, 3s

GEORGI

0MACON

COLt./MBl./S

8-?-0

8Z 0

2.0 0

100 MILES

IM M

Fig. 1. Index map showing location of the Stone Moun-

tain-Lithonia District.

1

2

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

of approximately one hundred square miles, located fourteen miles east of Atlanta (Fig. 1). It includes the eastern portion of DeKalb County, the southwestern portion of Gwinnett County, and the western portion of Rockdale County.
The district can be reached by U. S. Route 78 which enters the area at Stone Mountain, and by Georgia Route 12 which enters the district about five miles west of Lithonia. The Georgia Railroad traverses the area between Stone Mountain and Conyers.
PHYSIOGRAPHY
The northwest and southeast portions of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia district are located, respectively, in the Atlanta plateau and the Midland slope division of the Central Upland physiographic province as defined by La Forge (1925, p. 16). They are part of the broader Appalachian Piedmont which extends from New York to Alabama.
Stone Mountain (Fig. 2), a monadnock of the Atlanta plateau, rises from an elevation of approximately 1000 feet above sea level at its base to 1686 feet at its peak. It is a roughly elliptical mass of granite one and one-half miles

Fig. 2. Stone Mountain viewed from the northeast.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

3

long whose major axis trends N70W. It has a gentle western slope, a steep to vertical northeast slope, and eastern and southern slopes which range from 10-35.
Several monadnocks in the vicinity of Lithonia rise from 50 to 200 feet above the surrounding plain. Rock Chapel Mountain is located six miles S50E of Stone Mountain; and Little Stone Mountain, locally known as Pine Mountain, is located one mile east of Lithonia. Arabia Mountain consists of two distinct masses which lie three miles south of Lithonia. Two smaller masses occur on either side of Arabia Mountain; the eastern one is known as Bradley Mountain, and the elongated western one is known as Mile Rock.
Many smaller residual pavements* of Lithonia gneiss and Stone Mountain granite occur in the district. The larger ones have been outlined on Plate 1 and Plate 8. The monadnocks and pavements are nearly devoid of vegetation, with only occasional pine and cedar trees growing in joint cracks. Because of the mosses and lichens on their surfaces, the rocks have a dull gray appearance when viewed from a distance.
The area is drained by a dendritic stream pattern; the streams to the east of Stone Mountain and Little Stone Mountain are tributaries of Yellow River, and those to the west and south of Stone Mountain are tributaries of South River.
The steams are largely sluggish, with gentle gradients. Many have few, if any, rock exposures, whereas others have continual rapids for several miles. In general, the streams draining the southwest portion are aggrading and contain extensive deposits of alluvium.
The development of broad meanders and oxbow lakes in Yellow River southeast of Rock Chapel Mountain, and the presence of numerous rapids along the river west of Centerville, indicate that the stream profile has not reached equilibrium. The fluvial cycle is probably one of maturity.
WEATHERING
Deep, residual weathering produces a thick red mantle in which original structures such as banding and schistosity are often preserved. For this type of mantle, Becker (1894-95,
*Pavement is a general term for all nearly flat or gently sloping exposures of hard rock.

4

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

p. 289) proposed the term saprolite "as a general name for thoroughly decomposed, earthy, but untransported rock". The bedrock beneath the mantle is seldom exposed except in stream beds and large residual pavements.
The Lithonia gneiss forms a light gray to nearly red saprolite.
The garnet-mica schist forms a red, very micaceous saprolite in which the schistosity is preserved, even in rock almost entirely converted to clay. The muscovite quartzite seldom forms a saprolite except where it contains several per cent of feldspar; in such cases it readily disintegrates to a kaolinbearing sand.
The hornblende gneisses (amphibolites) produce the most distinctive type of saprolite. They weather to a red to brown clay (Fig. 3) which has a smooth feel when rubbed between the fingers. Frequently the clay merges gradually into hard, dark green hornblende gneiss.
Porphyroblastic biotite gneiss and biotite-hornblende gneiss

Fig. 3. Amphibolite layers in biotite gneiss, weathered to saprolite.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

5

weather to reddish colored saprolites which are often mottled with purple.
Stone Mountain granite forms a white, structureless saprolite which contains disseminated muscovite flakes.
A zone of partially weathered, iron-stained "sap" form::; a cover four to six inches deep on pavements of hard bedrock of Lithonia gneiss and Stone Mountain granite. A characteristic of the nearly flat pavements is the occurrence on them of horizontally floore?i: rounded pits of depressions. These weathering pits rango/ from several feet in diameter and several inches deep to tens of feet in diameter and several feet deep. The floors of the pits are almost always covered with a thin veneer of sandy, gray to black soil which supports a small growth of mosses and lichens. The pits are usually unrelated to any visible structure, although a few are found at the intersection of joint planes with the surface.
The origin of weathering pits was discussed by Smith (1941, pp. 117-127). He found that standing waters in the

Fig. 4. Elliptical weathering pits on the surface of Stone Mountain. Dark bands due to straining. Note book gives scale.

6

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

depressions were acidic, with pH readings ranging from 5.05.4. He concluded that the basins were initiated in slight depressions produced by spalling. Chemical weathering is accelerated by the presence of acidic water (produced by plant action) which breaks down the component minerals, especially feldspars. The sandy residuum is removed by rain water and wind action.
A second type of weathering pit occurs on the flanks of Stone Mountain. These pits are small, elliptically shaped depressions which are aligned parallel to the flow structure of the granite. Figure 4 illustrates typical examples.

PREVIOUS WORK
C. W. Purington (1894, pp. 106-108) described Stone Mountain as an eruptive laccolite which owes its present form to its original intrusive shape. Several years later, T. L. Watson (1902) included a petrographic description of the Stone Mountain granite and the Lithonia contorted granite-gneiss (Lithonia gneiss) in his report on the granites and gneisses of Georgia. He made no geologic map of the area.
The last detailed work done in the area was by J. G. Lester who made a petrographic study of the granites and gneisses of the region in 1938. The geology of the area was mapped by reconnaissance in 1939 by G. W. Crickmay.

PRESENT STUDY
Geologic mapping of the district was begun in the summer of 1949 and completed at the end of September, 1950. A total of 72 months were spent in the field. The writer spent about two months of the first field season making detailed pace and compass maps of quarries in the Stone Mountain granite and Lithonia gneiss.
Aerial photographs were used as control for geologic mapping. The only available topographic map of the area, the Atlanta sheet, surveyed in 1887-1888 (revised, 1895) was of no value in a detailed study because of its small scale.
The planimetric base map used in this report (Plate 1) was drafted by the writer from a compilation of Fairchild Aerial Surveys photographs (1939-40 flight). Control for the photographs was obtained from the "25,000 foot grid Mm-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

7

puted from 'Transverse Mercator Projection Tables for Geor-
gia' "* of the respective counties included in the map.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The writer is indebted to the Department of Mines, Mining and Geology of the State of Georgia for payment of field expenses. Captain Garland Peyton, Director, and Dr. A. S. Furcron, chief geologist of the Department of Mines, gave much helpful advice in the office and in the field.
Dr. Ernst Cloos, under whose direction the research was undertaken, spent several days in the field with the writer and made many helpful suggestions on the interpretation of the complex structures of the district. Dr. J. L. Anderson reviewed and gave helpful criticism of the section on petrogenesis; and Dr. R. W. Chapman, Dr. Byron Thomas and Mr. R. J. Pickering critically read the manuscript.
Dr. J. D. Ryan and Mr. H. J. Werner helped prepare the photomicrographs and photographs of rock specimens.
Mr. W. C. Overstreet laid out the control grid for the geologic base map.
Acknowledgment is also made to Mr. Nelson Severinghaus of the Consolidated Quarry Corporation, the Davidson Brothers of the Davidson Granite Co., Mr. G. A. Coffey of the Coffey Granite Co., and Messrs. Arthur Kellogg and Otis King of the Kellogg Granite Co., who gave the writer information on production figures, quarrying methods, and historical background of the stone industry. Major Lee Brantley, retired quarry operator, gave the writer information on most of the non-operating quarries of the district.
Finally, the writer is indebted to many others who helped make this report possible.

*Official highway maps of Gwinnett, Rockdale, and DeKalb Counties, Georgia. State Highway Department of Georgia, 1948.

8

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

PETROGRAPHY

MIGMATITE

Lithonia Gneiss

General statement-The Lithonia gneiss was first described in detail by Watson (1902) in a report on the granites and gneisses of Georgia. He named it the Lithonia contorted granite gneiss (1902, p. 127) on the basis of its structure and chemical composition. Crickmay (1939) revised the name to Granite gneiss, Lithonia type, apparently because of the non-contorted appearance of the gneiss in areas other th9-n the type locality, Lithonia. The rock is called Lithonia gneiss in this report and is classified as a migmatite on the basis of its physical and chemical characteristics.
Extensive quarrying from 1890 to 1951 has yielded many fresh exposures of Lithonia gneiss. Twelve quarries were mapped in detail by pace and compass. Several of these maps are reproduced in this report to show the most typical structures of the gneiss.
Distribution-The Lithonia gneiss underlies the northeast and southeast portions of the map area (Plate 1), forming the southwe~t extension of a large body of biotite gneiss more than 80 miles long and 20 miles wide, elongated in a northeasterly direction (Geologic Map of Georgia, 1939).
Megascopic character-The Lithonia gneiss is a light gray, evenly banded gneiss which contains characteristic pink garnetiferous layers (Figure 5) at several localities. The garnetiferous layers range in thickness from several inches to several feet. The rock is highly folded and sheared, and individual shear zones are filled with white aplite or pegmatite dikes.
The rock is medium-grained and extremely hard. A graywhite color is imparted by concentration of light and dark colored minerals into alternating bands ranging in thickness

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

9

Fig. 5. Garnetiferous layer within the Lithonia gneiss at Little Stone Mountain, faulted and offset several feet.

10

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

.
. '' ..... ,,
...' '~

APLITE
{ f"U}G/OClt+SE
= Ahlo)

I"

8/0T/T-R/CII L4YR

{PLA;/OCL.4St=~ /f.,/$')

Fig. 6. Aplite layer (vein) parallel to biotite-rich band. Collinsville Mountain, south o.f Little Stone Mountain. Sketched on polished surface.
from one-tenth to one-half inch. Aplite is commonly concentrated into layers parallel to biotite-rich bands composed of quartz, oligoclase (An15), biotite, and accessory microcline (Figure 6).
Microscopic character-Thin sections of evenly banded gneiss show an indistinct biotite foliation. The microscopic texture is xenoblastic and slightly inequigranular. The groundmass grains range in size from 0.1 mm to 1.0 mm, and large oligoclase and microcline grains range in size from 1.0 mm to 5.0 mm. Grain boundaries are irregular and frequently serrate, with mutual embayment of quartz and oligoclase. Replacement textures are common; symplectitic muscovite (Sederholm, 1916, p. 131) replaces oligoclase (Figure 7), and microcline replaces oligoclase (Figure 8). Many of the oligoclase and microcline grains are poikiloblastic, containing small, globular inclusions of quartz with random optical orientation.
The garnetiferous layers have a granoblastic groundmass containing small porphyroblasts of garnet. The quartz-oligoclase grain boundaries are irregular to polyhedral. Garnet is

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

11

..... Fig. 7. Muscovite replacing oligoc"l'ase with associated epi-
dote and calcite. Crossed nicols. X40.

Fig. 8. Microcline replacing oligoclase. Crossed nicols. XIS.
found in all stages of growth from incipient, irregular grains replacing oligoclase and quartz to euhedral garnet porphyroblasts (Figure 9).

Fig. 9. Garnet porphyroblasts replacing quartz and oligoclase. Parallel light. X40.

12

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

The mineral paragenesis, based on a study of grain boundaries in 15 thin sections, is as follows: Zircon and apatite ~ biotite ~ globular q u art z ~ oligocl~se ~ irregular (large) quartz ~ symplectitic muscovite ~ microcline.
The mineralogical compositions of the various rock types which constitute the Lithonia gneiss are shown in Table 1. In addition to these, scolecite and fluorite are sometimes found on joint surfaces.
The composition of the plagioclase of the gneiss was determined by plotting the indices of refract~n of cleavage flakes on the curves of Tsuboi (1923, Plate 1) and was substantiated by the Rittman zone method (Emmons, 1943, pp. 115-133). The concordant aplite veins or bands (Figure 6) contain oligoclase with a composition of An10 The plagioclase of the biotite-rich bands is Anw An17 and that of the garnetiferous layers is An16 The well banded biotite gneiss phase contains plagioclase with a range in composition from Ano-Anu and an average composition of Anl 2 Secondar) albite (Figure 10) is found at the borders of oligoclase in contact with microcline.

Fig. 10. Secondary albite at boundary of oligoclase and microcline. Crossed nicols. X40.
The change in composition from the biotite-rich phase to the evenly banded phase of the Lithonia gneiss is accompanied by a drop in the total weight percentage of plagioclase and a reduction of the anorthite content of the plagioclase. This relationship is shown in Figure 11.

TABLE 1 Modes of the Several Rock Types Constituting the Lithonia Gneiss in Weight Percent
Sample No.

Mineral
Quartz Oligoclase Microcline Biotite Muscovite Epidote Garnet Magnetite Pyrite Sphene Apatite Zircon Calcite Chlorite Sericite

L4(c)
37.5% 29.9 (An14) 25.4
4.5 2.7 X
X
X X X
X

L6
37.7% 33.3 (An12) 23.3
5.2 0.5 X
X X
X
X
-----
X

L21(1)
36.3% 27.0(Anu) 31.8
2.8 1.7 X 0.4 X

L22(16)
29.5% 23.0 (Anu) 44.0
2.2 0.4 0.4
0.5

------

X

X

X

X

X

----- ~

X

X

X

L23 (5)
28.8% 24.3 (An10 ) 44.7
0.9 0.8 X
0.5
X
X

S150 (4)
21.8% 54.2 (An11)
4.7 16.3
2.5 0.5
X

S150(5)
47.5% 35.2 (An16)
3.0 2.0 2.9 9.4 X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

X

Total

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

100.0

X-Trace

14

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Location of Samples in Table 1
L4 (C) -Evenly banded biotite gneiss from a small quarry on the east side of the Lithonia-Klondike Highway, located 2700 yards S13W of Lithonia. L6-Evenly banded biotite gneiss from the Forest Lake quarry, located 700 yards north of Forest Lake.
L21 (1)-Evenly banded biotite gneiss (with flow folded banding) from the A. G. Wilson quarry, located one mile north of Lithonia on the west side of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia Highway.
L22 (16)-Evenly banded biotite gneiss from the Davidson quarry, one mile north of Lithonia. L23 (5)-Concordant aplite vein from Collinsville Mountain, 1000 yards south of Little Stone Mountain. S150 (4) -Biotite-rich band within the Lithonia gneiss from the Snell Johnson quarry west of Little Stone Mountain.
S150 (5)-Garnetiferous layer from the Snell Johnson quarry west of Little Stone Mountain.

60

4..1
tl) 50

"'l::

"'v 40

(;:)

't!>
"C

30

'.J
Q. 20

~
h.: 10 ~
0

0
0 X0 /
/
/ /
/ X

o I
I I I
0
I
I +

= BIOTITE-RICH PHASE GARNET-RICH +=
LAYER E 1/ENLY BANIJEO e=PHASe
x" APLITE. 'PHASE

5

10

15

2.0 '7o

or Ah CONTENT

PLAGIOCLAS

Fig. 11. Range in weight percentage and anorthite content of plagioclase from various phases of the Lithonia gneiss.

Microcline is seldom seriticized or altered in any way.
Biotite is pleochroic: X = Straw yellow < Y = dark brownish green < Z = dark green. N a ranges from 1.582-
1.593 (-+- .002) and Nr ranges from 1.636-1.646 (-+- .002) The average composition (Winchell 1951, Fig. 257) is 45% annite, 45% phlogopite, 5% siderophyllite, and 5% eastonite.

STONE MOUN'i:'AIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

15

Secondary muscovite replaces oligoclase and biotite. It is
colorless and non-pleochroic. (-) 2V = 36-41. Nf3 = 1.602
( + .002) and Ny = 1.608 (+ .002). The composition (Winchell, 1951, Figure 254) is approximately 35% muscovite, 42% picrophengite, and 23% ferrimuscovite.
Garnet is pink in hand specimens and colorless in thin sections. Its index of refraction is 1.80 ( + .005) and its specific gravity, determined on a Berman microbalance, is 3.914. The composition cannot be determined from these data since they fall on three separate diagrams of Kennedy (1947, Figure 9, b, e, and h).
Epidote is largely secondary, replacing oligoclase and occasionally biotite. It is colorless to light brown and slightly
pleochroic in thin section. (-) 2V = 80 (+ 3o). Nf3 = 1.750
( + .005). Its composition (Winchell, 1951, Figure 343) is 75% HCa2Al3Sis013 and 25% HCa2FesSis013
Scolecite (a zeolite) has a hardness of 4.5. It is biaxial negative (2V not determined) and length fast. X !\ C = 14. Polysynthetic twinning is common parallel to { 100 } . Na = 1.510 (+ .002) and Nf3 = 1.516 (+ .002). Its composition is CaSi3A12010.3H20 (Winchell, 1951, p. 341).
Heavy mineral residue, obtained from panning Lithonia gneiss saprolite in a stream, contained two varieties of zircon, viz., well-developed crystals with prism and bipyramidal faces, and rounded ellipsoids. Both varieties were colorless to slightly brown. Colorless clinozoisite with the following
optical properties was found in the residue: ( +)2V = 4 +; Nf3 = 1.720 (+ .002). Magnetite and ilmenite were very
abundant.

METAMORPHIC ROCKS
General Statement
The gneisses and schists structurally overlying the Lithonia gneiss were formerly subdivided as Brevard schist and Carolina gneiss on the Geologic Map of Georgia (1939). The Brevard schist included garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite, and the Carolina gneiss included all of the remaining gneisses and schists of the area. Amphibolite bands and layers within the Carolina gneiss were called Roan gneiss by

16

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Lester (1938) because of their apparent similarity to that formation in other areas. However, for reasons given below, purely lithologic names are substituted in this report for the terms Brevard schist, Carolina gneiss, and Roan gneiss.
The garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite are not considered to be Brevard schist because they do not fit the original definition given by Keith (1907, p. 4). He described the Brevard schist as a blue to black graphitic schist and slate with interbedded quartzite, conglomerate and marble.
The name Carolina gneiss is a very loose term meaning different things to different authors. Darton and Keith (1901, p. 2), originators of the name, defined it as a thick series of alternating layers of biotite gneiss and schist whose individual bands are several inches to several feet wide. LaForge and Phalen (1913, p. 4) described the Carolina gneiss as an "immense series of interbedded mica gneiss, mica schist, quartz schist, garnet schist, conglomerate, kyanite-graphite schist, and fine granitoid layers". Finally, Jonas (1932, p. 236) considered the Carolina gneiss to be the southwestward extension of the Wissahickon biotite gneiss and schist of Virginia.
A name such as Carolina gneiss with a broad range of meanings cannot be used satisfactorily in a detailed geologic study to correlate rocks of unknown geologic age in widely separated areas. Nor can the amphibolites of the district be called Roan gneiss, for unlike the Roan gneiss which "appears to cut the Carolina gneiss" (Keith, 1907, p. 3), they are concordant and conformable with respect to the compositional banding of the enclosing gneisses and schists.
The metamorphic rock series is divided into six mappable units: (1) garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite with occasional layers of amphibolite and biotite gneiss, (2) medium-grained biotite gneiss, (3) muscovite-quartz schist, (4) amphibolite, (5) biotite-hornblende gneiss, and (6) porphyroblastic biotite gneiss. The amphibolite includes three lithologic types based on mineralogy: pyroxene-hornblende gneiss, epidote-hornblende gneiss, and talc-actinolite-chlorite schist. The porphyroblastic biotite gneiss includes six additional minor rock types which are too local in extent to be placed on the geologic map.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

17

Distribution
The garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite structurally overlie the Lithonia gneiss and form ridges which rise from 50 to 100 feet above the surrounding plain. In the area north of Rock Chapel Mountain the quartzite forms only one ridge, but west of Lithonia it forms two ridges. One and one-half miles S30W of Lithonia it forms three distinct ridges (Plate 1).
Medium-grained biotite gneiss structurally overlies the muscovite quartzite in the areas north of Rock Chapel Mountain and northwest of Centerville. It forms a well defined syncline within the porphyroblastic biotite gneiss in the area between Rock Chapel Mountain and Centerville. Muscovitequartz schist crops out intermittently along a small ridge 3000 yards north of Rock Chapel Mountain. The schist forms a broad, northwest trending syncline in this area. A local band of muscovite-quartz schist is located about a mile and three-quarters north of Redan.
Amphibolite which forms large and small layers and lenses within the porphyroblastic biotite gneiss can be used to outline the structural pattern of the gneisses if no other welldefined marker layers are present. A northwesterly trending synclinal basin of amphibolite is located just north of Centerville. A series of synclines and anticlines in the porphyroblastic biotite gneiss west of Lithonia are emphasized by the presence of large and small bands of amphibolite.
Biotite-hornblende gneiss forms several broad layers within the porphyroblastic biotite gneiss in the area four and onehalf miles southeast of Stone Mountain village. About one mile northwest of Bermuda the gneiss seems to grade into amphibolite. The porphyroblastic biotite gneiss occupies the remainder of the area underlain by gneisses.
Garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite
General statement-The garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite are grouped together as a formation which includes small to large layers of amphibolite, biotite gneiss, quartzmuscovite schist, biotite schist and biotite quartzite. These layers are usually thin and non-mappable, but occasionally the amphibolite layers are as m,uch as two miles long and

18

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fig. 12. Augen mica gneiss.
50 to 100 feet thick. Quartz-feldspar augen are locally w ell developed in the garnet-mica schist forming an augen gneiss (Figure 12) in the area south of Arabia Mountain.
Excellent exposures of saprolite and semi-fresh garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite occur along an east-west trending ridge, north of Rock Chapel Mountain. Augen mica gneiss crops out along Stephenson Creek, 1200 yards south of Arabia Lake dam. Thin layers of amphibolite are tightly infolded with the augen gneiss at this locality.
Garnet-mica schist-Fresh garnet-mica schist is dark gray, and the weathered rock is brown to red. In the final stages of decay the rock changes to a dark red, micaceous saprolite. The schistosity surfaces are sometimes corrugated.
In thin section the schistosity consists of an alternation of muscovite-biotite and quartz-feldspar bands 1.0 mm thick. The bands are frequently folded into minute crenulations which are ruptured by small shear planes.
The microscopic texture of the schist is granoblastic. Quartz and oligoclase grains have irregular, polyhedral boundaries. Idiomorphic grains of olive-green tourmaline sometimes exhibit a snowball structure formed by a spiral orientation of

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

19

inclusions in the centers of the grains. Garnet crystals are usually flattened parallel to the schistosity.

The rock is composed of almost equal amounts of biotite, muscovite, oligoclase, and quartz, with accessory amounts of garnet, sillimanite, kyanite, epidote, and tourmaline. Staurolite, zircon, magnetite, and ilmenite are rare.

Quartz is generally flattened and shows undulatory extinc-

tion in thin section. Oligoclase ranges in composition from
An23-An2s Biotite is pleochroic from X = light yellow < Y and Z = greenish brown. The indices of refraction of two

samples from widely separated areas are Na

1.593

(-+- .002) and Nr = 1.650 (-+- .002). The composition (Win-

chell, 1951, Figure 257) is approximately 45% annite, 45%

phlogopite, 5% siderophyllite, and 5% eastonite. Muscovite

= is slightly pleochroic from colorless to light yellow. N/3

= 1.594 ( .002), Nr

1.600 (-+- .002). (-)2V = 40

( 2). The composition (Winchell, 1951, Figure 254) is

approximately 50% muscovite, 37% picrophengite, and 13%

ferrimuscovite. Small, deformed, pink to violet garnets have

an index of refraction of 1.80-1.81 ( .005) and a range in

specific gravity from 3.951-4.100.

Muscovite quartzite-Fresh specimens of quartzite are hard, compact and gray to brownish in color. The quartzite weathers to a light brown, friable rock.

The rock is fine- to medium-grained and well foliated because of a subparallel orientation of muscovite flakes between and within quartz grains. A faint banding is sometimes present in the form of color changes or changes in grain size.

The microscopic texture in xenoblastic and quartz grain boundaries are sutured. Quartz shows pronounced undulatory extinction and fracturing.

Biotite Gneiss
Medium-grained biotite gneiss is a light gray, well-banded rock which is generally found as a soft reddish saprolite except in the beds of small streams. It is similar in appearance to the Lithonia gneiss, but it is distinguished from the Lithonia gneiss by the lack of shear zones and flow folds.

20

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

The gneiss is fine- to medium-grained (0.5 mm to 2.0 mm), gray-white, and evenly banded. The banding is formed by an alternation of biotite-rich and quartz-feldspar bands. Quartz is frequently flattened and stretched parallel to streaking of biotite flakes, forming a pronounced lineation.
Thin sections of the gneiss show a marked parallelism of biotite flakes and flattening of quartz parallel to the biotite. The texture is xenoblastic and slightly inequigranular. The grains of the groundmass range in diameter from 0.1 mm to 1.0 mm, and large quartz and oligoclase grains are up to 3.0 mm in diameter.
The biotite gneiss is composed of quartz, oligoclase and biotite, with small amounts of microcline, secondary muscovite, epidote, magnetite, and zircon. Stream-panned saprolite produces a rather large residue of magnetite and ilmenite (black sand) with a small amount of zircon.

Muscovite-Quartz Schist
Muscovite-quartz schist forms a small ridge in the area southwest of Centerville which can be traced for a distance of nearly five miles. The contacts of the formation were located on the basis of float pebbles except in stream and road exposures where the contact was actually seen.
The schist is a fine- to medium-grained rock composed almost entirely of quartz and muscovite. It is nearly white in fresh specimens but changes to a light tan when weathered. The schist contains feldspar porphyroblasts in 'outcrops located in a small stream 2000 yards S30W of Centerville.

Amphiborlite
General statement-The amphibolites of the district are divided into three lithologic types on a mineralogical basis: pyroxene-hornblende gneiss, epidote-hornblende gneiss, and talc-actinolite-chlorite augen schist. Pyroxene-hornblende gneiss and epidote-hornblende gneiss are treated together as hornblende gneiss because they are similar in color, texture, composition and occurrence. They differ only in their areal distribution and in the substitution of pyroxene for epidote. Both of these latter features are dependent upon metamorphism (see section on metamorphism).

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

21

Hornblende gneiss-Pyroxene-hornblende gneiss occurs as bands within garnet-mica schist and porphyroblastic biotite gneiss in a zone approximately one-half mile wide bordering the Lithonia gneiss. Past this zone, or metamorphic aureole, epidote-hornblende gneiss takes the place of the pyroxenehornblende gneiss.
Fresh specimens of dark green pyroxene- and epidote-hornblende gneiss are extremely hard. Both rock types contain a pronounced megascopic banding, ranging from less than 0.5 mm to 10.0 mm thick. The banding is formed by a concentration of dark- and light-colored minerals into alternating layers. The rock is usually fine-grained, but the grain size ranges from fine (0.1 mm) to coarse (20.0 mm).
With a hand lens, light green epidote or pyroxene grains can be seen scattered between the hornblende and plagioclase grains. The hornblende is either matted at random on the banding surfaces or oriented parallel to minor crenulations.
Pyroxene- and epidote-hornblende gneiss show a crystalloblastic texture in thin section. Porphyroblasts of hornblende (0.1 mm to 1.0 mm) are contained in a fine grained groundmass of plagioclase and epidote or pyroxene. Plagioclase grains are polyhedral, and have irregular boundaries. Rare porphyroblasts of garnet are idioblastic.
Hornblende grains in several thin sections contain numerous, small globular inclusions of quartz and plagioclase. A slight amount of chloritization of hornblende was noted in one thin section, and small remnants of hornblende were found within epidote clusters in most sections of epidotehornblende gneiss.
A distinguishing feature in many thin sections is the abundance of slightly rounded sphene grains included in hornblende and andesine (Figure 13).
The mineral paragenesis of the hornblende gneisses determined from grain boundary relationships is sphene~horn blende~andesine~epidote and/or diopside. However, in one specimen (sample A-76) hornblende appears to have been the last mineral formed because it contains inclusions of quartz, andesine and epidote.
The chemical compositions of the several types of horn-

22

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fig. 13. Slightly rounded sphene grains 1'n amphibolite. Polarized light. X40.
blende gneiss other than biotite-hornblende gneiss are approximately the same (Table 2, nos. C79, C-1486, and C1060).
The mineralogical compositions of two samples of hornblende gneiss are given in Table 3.
The plagioclase of epidote-hornblende gneiss ranges from An21-An39 and that of the pyroxene-hornblende gneiss ranges from An as-An"-a
Two types of hornblende are found in different sampl es of epidote-hornblende gneiss. A more abundant type is bi-
axial negative with a 2V of 74. Z (\ C = 16-18. N{3 = 1.660-1.666 (-+- .002) and Nr = 1.666-1.674 ( -+- .002). The other type has a (-) 2V ranging from 59 to 62. Z (\ C = = = 15-19. N{3 1.662-1.670 ( -+- .002) and Nr 1.668-1.674
( -+- .002). Both varieties are pleochroic from X = yellowish
green <Y = dark green> Z = blue-green.
The hornbledge of the pyroxene-hornblende gneiss is pleochroic from X = yellowish green <Y = dark green> Z = blue-green. It has a biaxial negative 2V ranging from 68720. Z (\ C = 15. N{3 = 1.666-1.672 ( -+- .002) and Nr = 1.672-1.677 ( -+- .002).
The optical properties of two hornblendes are compared with those of hornblendes from Winchell (1945, Table 3) in Table 4.
On the basis of the above optical data, these hornblendes apparently fall in group 3 of Sundius (1946, Figures 8 and

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

23

10). The indices of refraction are too high for the actinolites (group 1) and the 2V's are too low for the bulk of the analyses of group 2 (common hornblendes).

TABLE 2

Chemical Analyses* o.f Hornblende Gneisses

C839

C79

C1486

C1060

Si02 ---------------------Al203 -----------------Na20 --------------------
K20 ----------------------
CaO ---------------------Fe203 -----------------FeO ---------------------MgO -------------------Ti02 -------------------so3 ---------------------P205 -------------------Ignition ----------------

63.64 20.03
0.86 0.40 6.88 6.22 trace 2.17. 0.00 trace 0.00 0.00

45.83 20.04
1.14 0.17 13.75 12.76 trace 3.17 1.20 1.82 0.03 0.25

44.79 22.61
1.19 0.29 11.95 14.39 0.00 3.82
0.60 0.00 0.02 0.35

45.71 22.14
1.39 0.56 13.25 12.71 trace 2.76 1.30 0.00 0.14 0.00

Totals ------------------ 100.20 100.16 100.01

99.96

*Analyses performed in the laboratory of the Georgia Dept. of Mines by L. H. Turner, chief chemist, 1951.

C839-Biotite-hornblende gneiss from the bed of a small tributary of Stone Mountain Creek, 1300 yards N25 o E of Bermuda.
C79-Epidote-hornblende gneiss from a small hill, 1500 yards N67E of Centerville.
C1486-Hornblende gneiss from a locality 1900 yards S75W of Bermuda, on the south side of a small stream.
C1060-Pyroxene-hornblende gneiss from the west bank of a small tributary of Pole Bridge Creek, 2200 yards N85W of the Lithonia Post Office.

24

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

TABLE 3

Modal Analyses of Pyroxene-Hornblende Gneiss and Epidote-Hornblende Gneiss in Weight Percent

Sample No.

(1)

(2)

Plagioclase ------------------------------ 28.3 (An43) Hornblende ---------------------------- 30.8 Diopside ---------------------------------- 30.8 Epidote ------------------------------------ trace Sphene ------------------------------------ 9.6 Ores ---------------------------------------- trace Quartz -----------------------------------Tourmaline ------------------------------ trace

5.9 (An27) 64.4
29.0 0.6
trace

Total __________ ------------------------------ 99.5%

99.9%

(1)-Pyroxene-hornblende gneiss from a road cut, 2500 yards N48W of Lithonia Post Office.
(2)-Epidote-hornblende gneiss from a locality 3000 yards S17W of Redan.

+ + + The hornblendes of the epidote amphibolites have an
Mg :Fe" Fe" ' Mn Ti ratio of 65 :35 and those of the pyroxene amphibolites have a ratio of 60:40 (approximately). Both varieties are high in aluminum (Sundius, 1946, Plate 8, curve 3).

TABLE 4

Optical Properties of Hornblendes

Sample

2V

Z,'\C

Nf3

L193
88 A76 41

(-) 70 15 1.666 " 70 15 1.664 " 75 18 1.660 " 75 19 1.662

Ny
1.672 1.672 1.666 1.670

L193-Hornblende from pyroxene-hornblende gneiss from a road cut 2500 yards N48W of Lithonia Post Office.
88-Hornblende from a coarse appinite (Hallimond, 1943, Table 1, no. 135; see also Winchell, 1945, Table 3, no. 88).
A 76-Hornblende from epidote-hornblende gneiss in a road cut 4300 yards N88W of Lithonia.
41-Hornblende from a hornblendite xenolith (Hallimond, 1943, Table 1, no. 62; see also Winchell, 1945, Table 3, no. 41).

STONE 1\IIOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

25

Epidote is colorless to pale brown and is slightly pleochroic.
It has a biaxial negative 2V of 80 (-+-). Nf3 = 1.730-1.735
( .005). The composition (Winchell, 1951, Figure 343) is
approximately 85 % HCa2AlaSia0 13 and 15% HCa2FeaSi30 13.

pyroxene is colorless to slightly green and is faintly pleo-

chroic. It has a biaxial positive 2V = 59. Z 1\ C = 42.

= = N{J 1.694 (-+- .002) and Nr

1.710+. The composition

(Hess, 1949, Plate VI) is approximately 65 % diopside, 35 %

hedenbergite.

Talc-actinolite-chlorite schist-Talc-actinolite-chlorite schist occurs as small lenticularly shaped bodies within several hornblende gneiss layers. The schist is light green and contains numerous talc-actinolite augen up to one inch long embedded in a chlorite groundmass. These augen form knots on the weathered surface (Figure 14), and chlorite flakes produce a poorly developed schistosity around them.

Fig. 14. Talc-actinolite-chlorite schist showing the development of "knots" (augen) on the weathered surface. One mile N40E of Bermuda.

26

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Talc is colorless in thin section. It has a small biaxial negative 2V and has a length-slow orientation. Na = 1.536, Nf3 = 1.586, and Nr = 1.588. Talc with almost the same optical properties (Larsen and Berman, 1934, p. 164) has a composition 3Mg0.4Si02.H20.
Actinolite is slightly pleochroic from colorless to light green. Elongate grains are length slow. The optical con-
stants are: (-) 2V = 84; Z 1\ C = 19; Nf3 = 1.628
( +, .002) and NT = 1.637 ( + .002). These data indicate an iron-poor actinolite with a compositi<;m (Winchell, 1951, Figure 323) of:
90% H2Ca2Mg5Sis024
10% H2Ca2Fe5Sis024
= The chlorite has a biaxial positive 2V ~ 12. Nf3 1.581
( + .002). Polysynthetic twinning is common. It is slightly
pleochroic from X and Y = pale green > Z = colorless.

Biotite-Hornblende Gneiss
Medium-grained, evenly banded biotite-hornblende gneiss crops out in the bed of a small tributary of Stone Mountain Creek, 1300 yards N25 E of Bermuda. Seventeen hundred yards N40W of Bermuda, the gneiss grades. into amphibolite.
The gneiss has a pronounced megascopic banding composed of alternating concentration of light and dark colored constituents. Small, greenish epidote or pyroxene grains fill the interstices between biotite and hornblende grains. Locally, thin bands of amphibolite and biotite gneiss are interlayered within the biotite-hornblende gneiss.
In thin section the edges of the hornblende grains appear frayed and highly embayed by biotite and epidote.
The gneiss is composed of variable amounts of andesine, biotite, hornblende, quartz and epidote. Pyroxene is locally present in place of epidote, and hornblende is locally absent. The rock has the chemical composition of a diorite (see Table 2, C839).
The plagioclase is sodic anadesine with a composition
< > of An27-An36 Hornblende is pleochroic from X = greenish
yellow Y = dark green Z = blue-green. It has a biaxial

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

27

= negative 2V 65. Z 1\ C = 11. N{3 = 1.666 (+ .002) and = NT 1.674 ( + .002). Epidote and pyroxene have the same
optical properties as those described under the amphibolites.

Porphyroblastic Biotite Gneiss
The most abundant metamorphic rock type in the map area is a medium- to coarse-grained biotite gneiss which contains andesine porphyroblasts along the banding planes. The porphyroblasts attain a size of 10.0 mm in diameter and are largest in gneiss near the contact with Stone Mountain granite.
Thin, non-mappable layers and lenses of amphibolite and other minor rock types are frequently interlayered in the gneiss (see minor rock types below).
Saprolite exposures are found in many road cuts, but fresh exposures are rare except along small streams. Excellent exposures of interlayered porphyroblastic biotite gneiss, finegrained biotite gneiss, and amphibolite crop out along Crooked Creek, 3000 yards south of the crest of Stone Mountain.
Hand specimens show an abundance of irregular to lensshaped andesine porphyroblasts which range from 1.0 to 10.0 mm in diameter. Light green epidote grains are commonly associated with the porphyroblasts.
In thin section, subparallel biotite flakes are concentrated in bands which wrap around the andesine and quartz grains. Quartz grains are usually flattened parallel to the banding. The texture is porphyroblastic. Albite twinning planes in the porphyroblasts are sometimes bent, showing that deformation took place during or slightly after growth. An example of an andesine porphyroblast is shown in Figure 15.
The gneiss is Composed of quartz, andesine and biotite, with accessory epidote, zircon, magnetite, and ilmenite. The ande-
= sine has a composition of Anz7-An3 4. Biotite is pleochroic
from X= greenish yellow <Y and Z = dark green. Na>
1.586-1.588 (+ .002) and NT = 1.636-1.638 ( + .002). Its
composition (Winchell, 1951, Fig. 257) is 38% annite, 38% phlogopite, 12% siderophyllite, and 12% eastonite.

28

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fig. 15. Small andesine porphyroblast in porphyroblastic biotite gneiss. Crossed nicols. X40.
Minor Rock Types
Fine-grained biotite gneiss is interlayered with hornblend e gneiss along a small stream 2000 yards S30 W of Centervil\e.
Sillimanite-quartz schist and garnet-cummingtonite gneiss are interlayered with amphibolite and garnetiferous biotite gneiss along an abandoned county road, 2000 yards N25W of Norris Lake dam. Sillimanite needles, imbedded in quartz grains, and kyanite porphyroblasts are associated with one another in the sillimanite-quartz schist. Cummingtonite forms lath-shaped grains aproximately 10.0 mm long matted on the banding surfaces of garnet-cummingtonite gneiss. The cummingtonite is colorless to light green and faintly pleochroic
in thin section. ( + )2V = 76, Z 1\ C = 18. It is length slow
and it is commonly twinned parallel to {100 l
Muscovite-kyanite schist forms a sandy, micaceous saprolite in a 1oad cut located 1200 yards N20 W of the Norris Lake dam. The schist is interlayered concordantly with biotite gneiss and amphibolite. The banding and schistosity strike N70 W and dip 25 N.
Biotite-muscovite augen schist crops out along Yellow River, 4500 yards N67W of Centerville. The rock contains feldspar augen up to 10.0 mm long which tail into a granular mass of quartz and feldspar grains. Some of the augen contain small, undeformed garnet crystals, but larger garnet porphyroblasts within the schist are flattened.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

29

Garnet-kyanite gneiss is altered to semi-saprolite in a small road cut, 400 yards S20W of the intersection of longitude 84 05' west and latitude 33 50' north. The rock contains garnet porphyroblasts which range from 1.0 mm to 2.0 mm in diameter and contains kyanite blades up to 5.0 mm long. The kyanite is oriented parallel to a biotite lineation which strikes N60W and plunges 5NW. The kyanite blades are slightly bent but not fractured. Feldspar grains have largely altered to clay.
Phlogopite quartzite was found interlayered with biotite gneiss and amphibolite in a small stream, 2400 yards S32W of Centerville. The rock is composed of quartz, phlogopite, muscovite and accessory pyrite. The phlogopite is light brown and is slightly pleochroic from light brown to yellowish brown. It is biaxial negative with a small 2V (= 10 +).
The dispersion is r < v. N,e and Nr = 1.594 ( .002).

IGNEOUS ROCKS
Stone Mountain Granite (Quartz-Monzonite)
General Statement-The Stone Mountain granite was studied as early as 1894 by Purington (1894) who classified the rock as granite on the basis of its megascopic appearance. Watson ( 1902) made a more detailed study of the rock and classified it as a biotite-bearing muscovite granite (p. 114).
Modal analyses of six samples of the rock (Table 5) show that the ratio of oligoclase to microcline is nearly 50 :50. Four of the samples have slightly more oligoclase than microcline, and two of the samples have slightly more microcline than oligoclase. The average ratio of oligoclase to microcline is approximately 52 :48.
A rock of the mineralogical composition of the Stone Mountain granite falls into the adamellite (quartz-monzonite) category of the classifications of Johannsen (1939, Table 37), Hatch, Wells and Wells (1949, pp. 190-196), and Lincoln (Johannsen, 1939, Table 36). Shand's classification (Johannsen, 1939, p. 135) would place the rock on the borderline between potash and soda granite.
In order to conform to the usage of most authors, the Stone Mountain rock is reclassified as quartz-monzonite. For sim-

30

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

plicity, however, the name granite is retained in the sense of the term used by Hatch, Wells and Wells (1949, p. 190) who state, "When the term 'granite' is used without any qualifying adjective, it signifies a rock of the appropriate coarse texture, composed essentially of quartz, feldspar and mica".
Distribution-The stone Mountain granite pluton has a squidshaped map pattern. The main body covers an area of. approximately 10 square miles east and northeast of the village of Stone Mountain. Near Centerville, the granite forms a series of dikes trending N70W. North of Redan it forms a series of northeasterly trending dikes. The latter are elliptical in plan, swelling in the center and pinching at the ends.
Megascopic character-The Stone Mountain granite is a fineto medium-grained rock composed of quartz, feldspar, and muscovite with a minor amount of brown biotite. Biotite rich phases of the rock are located in the areas two and one-third miles N10W of Lithonia and two miles N70W of Arabia Lake.
Small tourmaline clusters are scattered throughout the granite in the vicinity of Stone Mountain (Fig. 37). They are composed of small, sub-parallel black tourmaline needles contained in a matrix of quartz and albite. The tourmaline radiates as in a sheaf of wheat. The white matrix grades imperceptibly into gray, micaceous granite.
Microscopic character-Thin sections cut perpendicular to the foliation show a slight alignment of mica flakes. The texture is allotriomorphic granular and faintly seriate. The groundmass, composed of quartz, oligoclase and microcline, ranges from 0.5 to 2.0 mm. Occasional phenocrysts of oligoclase and microcline attain a size of 3.0 mm. Muscovite occurs enclosed in, or at the boundary of quartz and feldspar grains. Oligoclase and microcline grains are poikilitic, containing numerous globular or irregular inclusions of quartz. Complex twinning is common in the oligoclase. Twin laws determined by the Rittmann method (Emmons, 1943, pp. 115-133) include acline-carlsbad, acline, carlsbad, albite-acline, and albite-ala B. Albite twins are uncommon.
The mineralogical composition is given in Table 5, numbers S59, S62, A208, S68, L58 and A68.
Oligoclase has a composition of An1 0-An11 Muscovite is

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

31

slightly pleochroic from colorless to light yellow. The indices
of refraction of the muscovite are Nf3 = 1.592 ( + .002) and Nr = 1.602 (+ .002). (-)2V = 40 (). The composition
(Winchell, 1951, Figure 254) is 52% muscovite, 37% picrophengite, and 11% ferrimuscovite. Biotite is pleochroic from
X= light yellow < Y and Z = dark brown. The indices of
refraction are Na = 1.595-1.598 (+ .002) and Nr = 1.6441.648 ( + .002). The composition (Winchell, 1951, Figure 257) is 60% siderophyllite, 20% eastonite, 15% annite, and 5% phlogopite.

TABLE 5

Modes of the Stone Mountain Granite in Weight Percent

Sample No.

S59

S62 A208

S68 L58

A68

Quartz
Oligoclase Micro cline Muscovite Biotite Epidote Garnet Apatite Zircon Pyrite Rutile Sericite Calcite

26.2% 37.1% 29.9% 27.2% 29.3 35.0

35.2 27.0 29.7 39.3 28.2 27.0

27.3 26.5 25.8 22.1 35.8 29.8

9.6 8.5 11.9 10.3 5.8 6.0

1.7 0.9 2.0 1.1

.9 1.6

X

X

0.5 X

X

.6

X X

X

X X X X X X

X X X

X X

X

X

X X X X X X

Totals
X Trace

100.0 100.0 99.6 100.0 100.0 100.0

859-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from a small quarry located 3000 yards S80E of the crest of Stone Mountain.
S62-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from Flat Rock Quarry, located lh mile north of Stone Mountain.
A208-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from the Venable Quarry, located on the SW side of Stone Mountain.
S68-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from the Kellogg Quarry, located on the east side of Stone Mountain.
L58-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from the Wells Quarry, located about one mile north of Redan.
A68-Sample of Stone Mountain granite from the Campbell property, located about 1h mile southeast of Centerville.

Uranophane, hyalite and damourite are found on joint surfaces of the Stone Mountain granite. Uranophane, a canary

32

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

yellow oxide of uranium, has the following chemical composition (Watson, 1902, p. 115):
Ignition ________________________________13.28
Si02 --------------------------------------18.55 (U02) 2, Fe20sP205 -------------- 4.95 Al20s ------------------------------------ 6.33 CaO -------------------------------------- 6.64 MgO -------------------------------------- 1.98 U (U04) 2 _____________________________ _47.18

Total ____________________________________ 98.91

Panned samples of saprolite yield a very small residue of colorless to light brown prismatic zircon crystals, clinozoisite, and pyrite.

Pegmatite Dikes
Medium- to coarse-grained pegmatite dikes are intrusive in all rocks of the district except diabase dikes and alluvium.
Pegmatite dikes in the Lithonia gneiss are usually small and irregular in outline. They are commonly discordant with the banding but in some cases they are partially concordant (Plate 6, Figure 1).
Large dikes up to several hundred feet thick and 500 yards long are found in the metamorphic series, e. g., in the area two-thirds of a mile north northwest of Lithonia.
Long, narrow dikes several inches to several feet thick are found in abundance on the northwest side of Stone Mountain. The pegmatites are composed of small to large potash feldspar and muscovite phenocrysts contained in a finer groundmass of quartz, albite, potash feldspar, and biotite. Tourma~ line is a frequent accessory which occurs as small to large black, striated crystals. Pink garnets are common, and violet fluorite is rare. Molybdenite is very rare.
Tourmaline crystals from a pegmatite on the southern slope of Arabia Mountain are pleochroic from light brown to black. The indices of refraction are: Ne = 1.638 ( + .002) ; No = 1.670 ( + .005). Tourmaline from a pegmatite on the south side of Stone Mountain is pleochroic from light brown to brown-~Teen. The indices are: Ne = 1.626 ( + .002) ;

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

33

No = 1.654 (-+- .002). Molybdenite occurs as small, lead
gray, foliated masses in several pegmatite dikes on Little Stone Mountain.
Aplite Dikes
Fine- to medium-grained aplite forms thin veins parallel to the banding, and fills shear zones in the Lithonia gneiss. At Rock Chapel Mountain it forms discordant dikes up to fifteen feet thick.
The aplite is composed of quartz, microcline, and albite (An1o) with occasional magnetite octahedra and little or no mica. Table 1, no. L23 (5) is a modal analysis of an aplite vein from Collinsville Mountain.
White aplite dikes and veins, numerous on the south side of Stone Mountain, commonly contain rosettes of tourmaline crystals up to two inches long. Some aplite studied by the writer forms composite dikes in which aplite occupies the center, and pegmatite forms one or both borders. Lester (written communication) states that in some dikes pegmatite occupies the center and aplite forms the borders.

Diabase Dikes
Fine-grained, dark green to black diabase forms large and small dikes in the metamorphic and igneous rocks of the northeast portion of the district (Plate I). They trend from N25-N40W. The largest dike is almost four miles long and approximately fifty feet thick. The smallest observed was only a few inches thick and of unknown length.
The rock is very resistant to weathering. Consequently it forms small ridges whose summits are covered with large, rounded boulders ("nigger heads"). Surface weathering produces a deep orange-brown to yellow-brown clay.
According to Lester and Allen (1950, p. 1219), the rock is composed of plagioclase and pyroxene and smaller amounts of olivine, hornblende, magnetite, and pyrite. Secondary minerals include uralite, kaolinite, and iddingsite.

ALLUVIUM
Stream alluvium covers the beds, and produces wide terraces along the courses of the larger streams of the district.

34

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

In addition, a heavy colluvial cover, containing large, angular quartz blocks, is present over the bedrock in the area south of Stone Mountain.

STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
STRUCTURES OF THE LITHONIA GNEISS
Banding
The banding of the Lithonia gneiss, although not deformed near the contact with the overlying mica schist, rapidly becomes flow folded ('contorted) and sheared a short distance within the gneiss.
The contact between the Lithonia gneiss and mica schist is concordant and conformable 2100 yards N42E of the Consolidated Quarry Corporation office (Rock Chapel Mountain). The banding and schistosity strike N70W and dip 40-45N. Eight hundred yards north of Klondike, the contact is also concordant. The banding and schistosity strike N69W and dip from 75S to 75N.
Very few contacts can be seen, but most can be inferred within a distance of about 50 feet.
Garnetiferous Layers
Individual garnetiferous layers are almost always oriented parallel to the banding of the biotite gneiss (Plate 6, Figure 2; Plate 5, Figures 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7), although in some instances they have been faulted and rotated out of conformity with the banding (Figure 20). Frequently the layers have been greatly attenuated (Figure 16).
Flow Folds
The banding of the Lithonia gneiss has been deformed into small folds which range from slight undulations to complex contortions, with variations from one extreme to the other often within a distance of a few yards (Pl. 6, Figs. 1 and 3). The folds range from several inches to several feet in half wave length and amplitude.
The flow fold axes vary considerably in orientation locally,

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

35

Fig. 16. Attenuated, faulted and rotated garnetiferous layers in the Lithonia gneiss. Located southwest of Arabia Mountain.
but in general they plunge gently in a northeasterly or southwesterly direction (Plate 3).
Ptygmatic Folds
Quartz veins in the Lithonia gneiss have been deformed into small, ptygmatic folds with thickened crests and attenuated limbs (Plate 5, Fig. 1). The veins are always concordant with the gneissic banding.
Several authors have described ptygmatic folds from other localities and have postulated various theories for their origin. Sederholm (1926, p. 73) stated that "the veins were probably all originally straight, filling fissures originated in the rock masses". He believed the folding phenomenon was more closely related to fluidal movements than to typical folding of solid rocks (1926, p. 80). Read (1931, p. 150) thought "the tortuous form of ptygmatic folds results from the resistance to plane fissuring of the country rock". Thus the folded form was the result of vein material filling irregular fissures. Kuenen (1938, pp. 11-27) believed the folding was due to

36

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

compression of plastic veins embedded in more ductile country rock.
The shape of the ptygmatic veins in the Lithonia gneiss, viz., thickening of the crests and thinning of the limbs, indicates that the vein material was plastic during deformation. It seems likely that the folding took place in a manner similar to that postulated by Kuenen.

Shear Zones
Two sets of shear zones were formed in the Lithonia gneiss at a late stage in its deformation. Individu~ shear zones from one to ten feet long and up to two inches thick are filled with recrystallized gneiss or aplite or pegmatite dikes. Several examples are illustrated in Fig. 20 and Plate 5, Figures 6 and 7.
Balk (1931, p. 361) described shear zones in the Adirondack anorthosite which are "filled with quartz, microcline

Fig. 17. Shear zone in building block of the Lithonia gneiss. Displacement of banding and aplite vem approximately four inches.

S'l'ONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRI.CT, GEORGIA

37

N

w

E

s
Fig. 18. Compass rose diagram of the strike of one hundred and twenty-two shear zones in the Lithonia gneiss.
and variable proportions of an acid plagioclase, garnet, epidote or chlorite". Cloos (1936, pp. 387 and 388) found flexures or shear zones in the contact zones of the Sierra Nevada pluton. Kvale (1948) described similar shear zones from the Bergsdalen Quadrangle, Norway.
The shear zones flex the banding. Displacement is usually negligible, although displacements of four inches are common (Fig. 17). More competent garnet-rich layers are often sharply faulted by the shearing (Figure 5).
One hundred and twenty-two shear zones were measured in the Lithonia gneiss, mostly in the area between Arabia Mountain and Rock Chapel Mountain. In most instances only the strike of the shear zones was measured since the dip could not be obtained from horizontal pavement surfaces. The strike of the zones has been plotted in Figure 18. A pronounced set strikes N25 E, and a less pronounced one strikes N40W.
The two sets of shear zones are separated by an angle of 65 (5).

38

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

In laboratory experiments* two similar sets of shear planes were formed in moist pottery clay subjected either to rotational or non-rotational stress. The shear planes formed during the initial stage of deformation include an angle of 62 (+ 3) ; continued stress widens the angle of separation of the shear planes to 70 (5).
Rotational deformation produces a non-symmetrical rotation of the shear planes. The two sets of initial shear planes
which form are separated by an angle of 62 (+). A syn-
thetic set is oriented 10 () clockwise from the major com-
ponent of stress and an antithetic set is oriented 72 ()
clockwise from the major component of stress. These two sets of shears. are rotated during continued deformation to position 13 (+) and 80 (+),respectively, from the major component of stress.. The antithetic shear planes are much more abundant than the synthetic shear planes.
The correlation of laboratory results with field data can only be approximated. However, the shear planes produced in the laboratory by rotational deformation are very similar in plan to the shear zones observed in the Lithonia gneiss.

Mica Lineation
Biotite and muscovite flakes in, the banding surfaces of the Lithonia gneiss are stretched and crenulated. The l,ong axes of the stretched micas and the axes of crenulations form lineations with a northwesterly strike. Seventy-five mica lineations have a maximum strike of N51 W and plunge l0NW as shown in Figure 19. The Mica lineation was also observed in several pegmatite and granite dikes. The direction of lineation was not deflected by the shear zones.
The occurrence of the lineation in all phases of the Lithonia gneiss indicates that it was formed at a very late stage of deformation.
A second type of lineation, consisting of biotite-muscovite clusters aligned in the direction N20E, are found in the Lithonia gneiss north of Centerville.

*Structural experiments performed on moist pottery clay by Professor Ernst Cloos, Structural Geology Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

39

w

E

s
Fig. 19. Strike and plunge of seventy-five mica lineations plotted in the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection. Contours 1-3-5-10-20-22%.
Joints
Joints are not common in the Lithonia gneiss. Two sets are found in the area north of Rock Chapel Mountain. A pronounced set strikes N-S and dips vertically, and a less pronounced set strikes E-W and dips vertically. The former set is parallel to the grain of the gneiss, and the latter is parallel to the hardway of the gneiss.
On the south side of Little Stone Mountain one set of joints strikes northwesterly, and the other joints are randomly oriented. Some of the joint planes have been opened widely by movement of jointed blocks down the dip of the sheeting surfaces.
All pavements of the gneiss are sheeted parallel to the surface, forming layers from one to ten or more feet thick. The layers are thinnest near the surface and become progressively thicker at lower levels. The sheeting planes are utilized in quarrying operations.

40

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

LEGEND

,?/1 I SHEAJ'lED AND FLOW FOLDED SANDING
GARfllE:i-R"l-1

.

LAYE-R

PLAN

VIEW OF

/

ORA6 FOLDED LAYER

A SMALL QUARRY
0 N THE WEST
FLANKOFMILE

/

PE.G N\A1"1"t E

Dll<.E

N

ROCK
SCALE

I

APLITE VEIN

0

15

30 FEET

t:==============l

1

,

LA.H. 50

Fig. 20

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHON IA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

41

Structures of Selected Exposures of the Lithonia Gneiss
A small quarry (Fig. 20) located on Mile Rock shows the typical structures of the Lithonia gneiss in that area. A pink garnetiferous layer has been faulted and rotated by a northwesterly trending set of faults. Swarms of aplite and pegmatite dikes were intruded along a very pronounced set of shear zones.

Fig. 21. Close up of drag-folded layer 10 the Lithonia gnetss.
A band of gneiss about two feet wide shows drag folds similar to those found in incompetent beds of folded sedimentary rocks. Figure 21 is a close up of the drag folds.
Detailed structures of the gneiss at Little Stone Mountain (Plate 4) are illustrated in Plate 5, Figures 1-8.
A pace and compass map of the DeKalb County Quarry, one-half mile north of Little Stone Mountain, is shown in Figure 22. Representative structures are shown in Plate 6, Figures 1-3.

42

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

... () ...
:JHIICIC. .:
N

I LEGEND APLITE. DIKE

~ PEGMATITE

5 '!.TRIKE A.N 0 01 P OF CONTO RTE.D &ANDING

'\...45 5TRIKEAND DIP " " " ' orBAJiO/NG

'

.STRIKE AND

... fLU"'G~ Of MICA

10 LINEA,.TIDN

4o ,o: ~~:~~zJ~~~~~ '\__... STRIKE AND DIP

I
/
/

5TRIKE Df SHEA.R 20HES !i~OWING
REL~TIVE ors-
PLAC.EMENT
WORKED FAC.E OF6.UARR.Y

r DEKALB COliNTY Q.l/ARRY ~MILE N. OF LITrLE

25

so.SCAL 100

150

STONE MOliNTAIN

ZOO FEET

L. HRRMANN UISO

Fig. 22

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

43

STRUCTURES OF THE METAMORPHIC ROCKS

Schistosity
The garnet-mica schist contains a pronounced schistosity formed by an alternation of biotite-muscovite and quartzfeldspar constituents in thin bands about 1 mm thick. The schistosity is commonly crenulated into minute folds several millimeters. in amplitude and is occasionally ruptured by small fracture cleavage planes. The mica flakes bend around flattened garnet crystals in the schistosity planes.
The muscovite-quartz schist also has a very strong schistosity consisting of parallel orientation of muscovite flakes in a quartz matrix. In some localities the schistosity is badly deformed into small, tight, zig-zag folds several inches across.

Foliation
The muscovite quartzite contains a foliation rather than a schistosity or banding. The foliation consists of a parallel orientation of muscovite flakes within and between quartz grains. In some localities a faint color banding can be seen parallel to the foliation, but it is not easily recognizable.

Banding
The various types of gneisses of the area are weakly to strongly banded. A pronounced banding in the mediumgrained biotite gneiss is formed by alternation of thin (2mm) biotite-rich and thicker (4mm) quartz-feldspar bands. The banding of the biotite-hornblende gneiss is formed by alternation of biotite-hornblende and quartz-feldspar bands.
Banding in the amphibolites ranges from thin laminations resembling the cleavage of slate to thicker color banding formed by alternation of epidote- or pyroxene-rich layers with hornblende-rich or plagioclase-rich layers. Frequently the banding is folded into small crenulations (Fig. 28).
The porphyroblastic biotite gneiss is thinly banded, but the banding is accentuated by the presence of small (1mm) to large (1 em) porphyroblasts of plagioclase. A large exposure of saprolite and semi-saprolite porphyroblastic biotite gneiss, located along Georgia Route 141 approximately one mile north of Stone Mountain, illustrates this structure.

44

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

PLATE 5
Detailed Structures of the Lithonia Gneiss in the Vicinity of Little Stone Mountain
(Figures refer to inset numbers 1-8 of plate 4)
Fig. 1. Thin ptygmatically folded quartz vein (white) in the Lithonia gneiss.
Fig. 2. Concordant and conformable garnet1ferous layer within the Lithonia gneiss. Discordant pegmatite dike has been intruded along a fault which offset the garnetiferous layer about 5 feet.
Fig. 3. Garnetiferous layer intruded by a pegmatite dike as in Fig. 2. Dike contains small inclusions of the garnetiferous layer.
Fig. 4. Concordant aplite veins (white) within the Lithonia gneiss, sheared and offset along gently dipping shear zones. Small pegmatite dike intruded the gneiss, deflecting the banding.
Fig. 5. Large layer of garnetiferous gneiss faulted and offset along sharp breaks. The biotite gneiss shows no effect of the faulting except for flowage around the more competent blocks. See also Fig. 5 (photograph in text).
Fig. 6. Biotite gneiss containing concordant aplite vein (white) sheared in horst and graben nature along small shear zones.
Fig. 7. Intensely sheared biotite gneiss.
Fig 8. Interlayered biotite gneiss and garnetiferous layers faulted and intruded by biotite gneiss.

PLATE 5
PTY<TMATIC ()1/Aii'TZ VeiN

QUARRY FACE
FIG. .!

FIG.2 APLITE VEINS

GAii'IVcT RICH LAYER
5'
FIG. 7

FIG. 4
BIOTITe GNe/.5:)
5' FIG. 6
F/G.B

46

STONE MOUN~AIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

PLATE 6
Detailed Structures in the Lithonia Gneiss at the DeKalb County Quarry
(Figures refer to inset numbers 1 to 3 of text Fig. 22)
Fig. 1. Sheared and flow folded biotite gneiss intruded by a late tectonic, partially discordant dike of pegmatite. Note that the pegmatite is slightly offset by a shear.
Fig. 2. Conformably interlayered biotite gneiss and garnet-rich layers which are flow folded and intruded by late tectonic pegmatite dikes.
Fig. 3. Evenly banded and slightly deformed biotite gneiss containing concordant quartz bands. Banding is cut and slightly offset by shears along which late tectonic aplite veins have been intruduced.

PLATE 6 Fig. 1
Fig. 3

48

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Compositional Layering
The gneisses and schists of the metamorphic series form interstratified layers varying from a few feet to hundreds of feet thick. Fifteen hundred yards N28W of Norris Lake dam, biotite gneiss, biotite schist and amphibolite are interlayered in a saprolite exposure (Fig. 23) in which an amphibolite layer is sheared into two augen-shaped lenses about six feet long. Numerous pegmatite dikes are almost parallel to the layering of the gneiss.

w

GN/.55

I0 I

QCJ/IRTZ V/N

Fig. 23. Interlayering of gneiss, schist and amphibolite in saprolite exposure.
Three thousand five hundred yards N50W of Norris Lake dam, a saprolite exposure of biotite gneiss in a road cut contains thin, concordant layers of amphibolite and mica schist (Fig. 24). Numerous other exposures showing the compositional layering of the gneisses .can be seen throughout the area.
Minor Folds
Small open to isoclinal folds ranging in amplitude from several inches to several feet are found in the muscovite quartzite, amphibolite, muscovite-quartz schist, and gneisses.
Small folds up to several feet across are found throughout the length of the muscovite quartzite ridge. Near Norris Lake

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

49

s'

..5CH/ST~

Fig. 24. Lenses of mica schist and amphibolite m biotite gneiss in saprolite exposure.
the fold axes strike almost E-W and plunge gently east; 1200 yards N73 W of Lithonia Post Office, small fold axes strike Nl0W and plunge l0N; along the ridge 500 yards S40W of the Georgia Route 12-Klondike Road intersection, the fold axes strike N25W and plunge l5NW. South of Arabia Lake, the axes of several folds strike S50E and plunge l0SE. Figure 25 illustrates a typical example of the small folds in muscovite quartzite.

FOOT Fig. 25. Small folds in muscovite quartzite.

50

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Numerous small folds from one to ten feet in amplitude occur in the gneisses southwest and south of Arabia Mountain. The axes plunge a few degrees to the northwest or southeast (Plate 3). The folds are generally but not always isoclinal.
The axis of a small fold in interlayered biotite gneiss and amphibolite (Fig. 26), located in a road cut 3200 yards S30W of the crest of Stone Mountain, strikes N65E and plunges l0NE.

N

10'

,B/OT/TE GNE/SS

Fig. 26. Folded biotite gneiss and amphibolite in saprolite exposure.
Interlayered fine-grained biotite gneiss and amphibolite have been folded into a tight, nearly isoclinal overturned fold in a small stream 2200 yards S30W of Centerville. The axis of the fold strikes Sl8E and plunges 20S. About 100 yards downstream the axes of other folds are erratic.
Longitudinal Folds
A detailed structure map of the area one and one-half miles N50W of Arabia Lake (Fig. 27) shows that the mica schist and muscovite quartzite form a syncline overlying the Lithonia gneiss. Southwest of Rock Springs Church the syncline plunges gently to the north and the banding of the gneiss dips beneath the schist at low angles.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

51

//.'(/-"

//
'

.'/;.(/

;

.



.~//';!';.'

/

/

N

CHURCH
LEGEND

STI?E.IVf ALLUVIUM

P-BIOT/TE GNEISS

SMALL AREA MUSe. q(JARTZITE

NSoow o;= ARABIA

LAKE.
0 :SCALE. 1000 FEET

IV!C.4 5CJ.IIST
D
LIT/IONIA Glt/EIS::i

Fig. 27

STRIKE If !YO OIPOF 5CH/STOSITY AIVO 8ANOING
'--..20
MIC4 LINEATION
C()NTACTS

52

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

The schist forms two synclinal troughs in the areas west and south of Arabia Mountain. The synclines and eroded anticlines (see sections D-D' and E-E', Plate 2) probably trended northeasterly prior to transverse folding.

Undulatory Folds
These folds, common throughout the district, are recognized by the rapid change in the attitude of the banding or schistosity within short distances. The fold axes strike perpendicular to the local trend of the rock in which they are found.
Transverse Folds
The metamorphic rocks of the district were gently uplifted on the western flank of the Lithonia gneiss and folded into broad, gentle anticlines and synclines. The limbs of the folds dip at low angles except in the area south of Arabia Mountain where they dip steeply to vertically. The fold axes plunge gently to the northwest except in the area west of Bermuda where they plunge to the north.
The best defined fold of the district is a broad syncline, southwest of Centerville, whose limbs can be traced for a distance of almost four miles along the crest of a small ridge of muscovite-quartz schist. The schistosity clips gently toward the trough of the syncline (Plate 2, section C-C').

Crenulations
The banding of the amphibolites in the northeast portion of the district is crenulatecl into small folds whose amplitudes range from a fraction of an inch to several inches (Fig. 28).

Lineations
The types of lineation in the metamorphic rocks can be divided into mica orientation (crenulations and/or stretching), fold axes (axes of major, minor, and undulatory folds), and hornblende orientation. A fourth, less pronounced, type is the orientation of garnet porphyroblasts in the garnet-mica schist.
The mica lineation is the best developed and most consistent type in the area. It is essentially the same as that found in the Lithonia gneiss, being either a stretching of mica

STONE MOUN TAIN-LITHO::'I :A DISTRI CT, GEORGI A

53

Fig. 28. Crenulations in amphibolite.
N
E
s
Fig. 29. Strike and plunge of one hundred and ninetyfive mica lineations in the metamorphic rocks. Lower hemisphere of equal area projection. Contours 1-2-5-10-12% .

54

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

flakes on the banding or schistosity surfaces into ellipsoids (more nearly ellipses), or a slight crinkling or currugation of schistosity. This latter type is restricted to the garnet-mica schist. One hundred and ninety-five mica lineations measured in the schists and gneisses and plotted in the lower hemisphere of an egual area projection (Fig. 29) show a maximum strike of N65W and plunge of l0NW. This northwesterly trend can also be seen on the lineation map (Plate 3). The only place where this trend is not found is in the vicinity of Stone Mountain.
The axes of small folds in the muscovite quartzite, amphibolite, and in some of the interlayered gneisses are the only ones which can be measured in the field. The axes vary considerably in trend except in the southwest portion of the area (Plate 3) where they strike northwesterly. They, like the mica lineation, are most erratic in the vicinity of Stone Mountain granite intrusions.
Hornblende orientation is an unimportant type of lineation because it is uncommon and rarely conforms to the structural patterns defined by mica lineation and fold axes. It is formed by parallel orientation of hornblende needles on the banding surfaces of the amphibolites.
The orientation of ellipsoidally deformed garnet crystals in the garnet-mica schist can be seen throughout the extent of the formation. The percentage of deformation is as much as 50%, considering that the garnets were nearly spheroidal originally. Their orientation was parallel to the mica lineation in every locality in which they were measured.

Faults
Only three faults were found in the district. A steep, east dipping reverse fault is located in the area 2000 yards N20W of the intersection of U. S. Route 78 and Georgia Route 141. The fault plane, filled with a quartz vein, shows a displacement of only a few feet, but the interlayered porphyroblastic biotite gneiss and amphibolite in the vicinity of the fault are highly brecciated.
A small, steeply dipping fault may be present in the area 2500 yards N22W of the Norris Lake dam because a se-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

55

quence of amphibolite and muscovite-quartz schist has been offset approximately 150 yards.
Four hundred yards north of Klondike, a small thrust fault has locally sheared the south limb of the muscovite quartzite syncline (Fig. 30).

Joints
Four hundred joints measured in the metamorphic rocks were plotted in the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection (Figure 31). The most pronounced joint set strikes N32E and dips vertically. These joints are perpendicular to the regional mic.a lineations and transverse fold axes.

Fig. 30. Small thrust fault in tightly folded quartzite and mica schist. Four hundred yar'ds north of Klondike.
STRUCTURES OF THE STONE MOUNTAIN GRANITE (QUARTZ-MONZONITE)
Flow Structures
The subparallel orientation of muscovite and biotite flakes in the Stone Mountain granite is termed flowage foliation in this report. The cross sectional shape of the pluton, as shown

56

STONE MOUNTAiN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

N

w

E

s
Fig. 31. Strike and dip of four hundred joints in the metamorphic series, plotted i'n the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection. Contours 1-3-5-Go/0
by the foliation, is slightly asymetrical .(See sections A-A' and B-B', Plate 2).
A pronounced foliation strikes approximately Nl0W and dips from 10-55E in a small quarry on the northwest side of Stone Mountain (Figure 32). The foliation is accentuated by the parallel orientation of autoliths (Figure 33).
The attitude of the foliation changes progressively toward the southwest side of the mountain where it strikes N40W and dips from 75SW to 70NW. On the south flank of the mountain the foliation varies (from W to E) from strike N70W and dip 45S to strike N30E and dip 35SE.
At numerous localities the foliation is indistinct. An alignment of mica flakes is visible on nearly horizontal pavement surfaces but not in surfaces perpendicular to the alignment. In these cases the mica is oriented about an axis of fluctuation as shown by mica girdles in diagrams M5 and M6, Plate 7.
Disc-shaped autoliths composed of muscovite and biotite

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

57

LEGEND

~

STRIKEANDDIP

I

20 OF M USC.OVITE.

'5

FOLIATION

75
,tzs
i

/\

\/'.

N

\

''l~5'\~
' '~ ao'- 'f,,, ,,.'~0' /I1/! .' '"

.~1~33t'50i7i0'f2
~~5
15
~
~5 80

~
IS
/,!

SMALL 1 FOLDED M I C. A SE6RE.6ATIONS WITH STRIKE. AND Pl..UNG O~A'K.ES
:STRIKE AND OIP OF 'SMALL FAULT WITH 'TRIKE AND PLUNGE OF'
~LICtcENSIDES

~ STRIKE AND OlP
J2 OF SMALL
A TOINT!:I PEGMATITE c50 011<1": WITH O'P

I

i.

Q VARR"( FACE

" SMALL QUARRY ON NORTHWEST -:~);!{\\ OtJM P

r

51 DE OF
40 z.o

5TO N E MOUNTAIN

SC A L. E

40

80

'"

160 FEET

L.A.H. 1950

Fig. 32

with accessory garnet range from a few inches long and a fraction of an inch thick to about one foot long and several inches thick (Figure 33). They are often plicated parallel to the axes of mica fluctuation. Some of the autoliths contain large tourmaline crystals (Fig. 34).

Xenoliths
Numerous small, angular xenoliths of biotite-rich gneiss occur in the granite on the east side of Stone Mountain. They range in diameter from one to three feet. The banding of a xenolith which is partially surrounded by pegmatite (Fig. 35) is disharmonious with respect to the foliation of the granite.
Large and small xenoliths are found in a large granite dike which crosses Yellow River 3500 yards west of Centerville. The xenoliths range from small interlayered biotite gneiss and amphibolite blocks (Figure 36) to large areas of gneiss up to 1000 yards long.

58

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fig. 33. Mica autoliths In the Stone Mountain granite.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

59

Fig. 34. Mica autolith containing a large tourmaline crystal.

Fig. 35. Angular xenolith of biotite gneiss m the Stone Mountain granite.

60

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fig. 36. Xenolith or interlayered biotite gneiss and amphibolite ( Gn) in Stone Mountain granite ( SMgr).
Tourmaline Clusters
Small, ellipsoidal clusters of tourmaline are scattered throughout the granite in the vicinity of Stone Mountain. They are often concentrated into zones parallel to the foliation (Figure 37).
Joints
Very few joints are found in the granite. However, of forty joints measured from the west side of Stone Mountain, a majority strike N55 W and dip from vertical to 65 NE. These are probably equivalent to the longitudinal joints discussed by Balk (1937, p. 34) as they strike nearly parallel to the foliation and dip steeply.
Nearly horizontal joints, or sheeting planes, are parallel to pavement surfaces, as in the Lithonia gneiss. Incipient fractures parallel to the sheeting are frequently found in quartz veins and quartz grains.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

61

Fig. 37. Tourmaline clusters concentrated m a zone parallel to the foliation of granite.

62

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

RELATIONSHIP OF STRUCTURES TO DEFORMATION

General Statement
The structural interrelationships of the rocks of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia district can be summarized in a regional plan of deformation based on the structures of the district and on the regional trends obtained from the Geologic Map of Georgia (1939).

Coordinates of Deformation
The coordinate system of Sander (Cloos, 1946, p. 6) is used to designate the structural axes of the region and of the district under discussion. Thus, b is parallel to the regional axis of uplift which trends northeasterly, a is perpendicular to b in a nearly horizontal plane, and c is perpendicular to plane a b.
The coordinates of the Stone Mountain district are designated as a', b', and c', where b' is parallel to minor and transverse fold axes, a' is perpendicular to b' in the plane of schistosity or banding, and c' is perpendicular to plane a' b'.
The relationships between the two coordinate systems are b__l_b', a_L a, and c = c'. The coordinate a (= b') is the regional direction of transport.

Major Axis of Uplift
On the Geologic Map of Georgia, the Lithonia gneiss covers an elongate area approximately 80 miles long in a north northeasterly direction. This northeast elongation is not apparent on the geologic map of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia district (Plate 1) because the overlying rocks have been folded into northwesterly trending transverse folds.

The major axis of uplift of the region, b, is considered to

be parallel to the northeast elongation of the Lithonia gneiss.

The longitudinal folds of the garnet-mica schist and musco-

vite quartzite are considered to have been originally parallel

to this major axis of uplift.



Minor Axes of Uplift Minor upwarps which developed on the western flank of

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

63

the Lithonia gneiss folded the metamorphic rocks into a series of broad, open and gently plunging transverse anticlines and synclines, whose axes, b', trend in a northwesterly direction. At the same time the upwarps refolded the originally northeasterly trending longitudinal folds of the garnet-mica schist and muscovite quartzite into transverse folds.
The axes of many small folds in the schists and gneisses are parallel to b', but some, notably in the vicinity of Stone Mountain, are deflected from the regional trend, presumably by the intrusion of granite.

Mica Lineation
During the major uplift, the metasedimentary sequence above the Lithonia gneiss migrated westward ( ?) in the regional direction of transport, a, producing a strong mica lineation in the direction N60W (Figure 29).
The mica lineation is assumed to be parallel to a because, according to Cloos (1946, p. 30), the amount of elongation possible parallel to fold axes is restricted, and depends upon the amount of arcuation of the fold axes during deformation. Thus, the extension parallel to the axes of the Appalachian Mountains rarely exceeds 10% (Cloos, 1946, p. 30), whereas the extension parallel to the direction of transport in the South Mountain fold, Maryland, is as much as 182% (Cloos, 1947, p. 907). The amount of elongation of garnets in the Stone Mountain area is as much as 50%, considering that they were originally nearly spheriodal in shape (See Cloos, 1947, pp. 861-865). The garnet elongation parallels the mica lineation and, consequently, parallels a.

Shear Zones
At a very late stage of deformation a pronounced set of shear zones was developed in the direction N25 E and a less pronounced set in the direction N40W.

Joints
The most prominent joints of the district are parallel to the plane a'c'. They strike northeast, perpendicular to the direction of mica lineation.

64

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

RELATIONSHIP OF IGNEOUS INTRUSIONS TO DEFORMATION
The Stone Mountain granite commonly forms dikes in the crests of anticlines and dikes nearly perpendicular to the axes of northwesterly trending folds. For this reason it seems likely that the intrusions made use of breaks formed by tension in anticlinal crests and breaks formed perpendicular to fold axes.
The. intrusions of the granite apparently produced additional deformation in the rocks which they intruded because the regional trend of fold axes and mica lineation is deflected in the vicinity of Stone Mountain.
Diabase dikes, the last rocks of the area to be formed, apparently followed a minor set of joints which trend north northwest.

PETROFABRIC ANALYSIS
Method
Six mica and five quartz fabric diagrams were prepared from six oriented rock samples (Plate 7); three of these samples are of the Lithonia gneiss, one sample is of the muscovite quartzite member of the mica schist-quartzite formation, and two samples are of the Stone Mountain granite.
A four axis Leitz universal stage mounted on a petrographic microscope was used to measure the orientation of cleavage poles of micas, and the optic axes of quartz grains in thin sections of oriented samples. The poles and axes were plotted in the lower hemisphere of an equal area projection, and the points were counted with one percent counter at intervals of less than one-half centimeter.
The diagrams in Plate 7 can be spatially oriented by means of small strike arrow and perpendicular dip line. The number on top of the arrow indicates the strike of the plane of the diagram; e. g., the number 32 means means a strike of N32E, and the number 94 means a strike of S86E. Anumber under the arrow of less than 90 indicates the diagram dips toward the reader, and a number greater than 90 indicates the diagram dips away from the reader; e. g., the number 85 means the diagram dips at an angle of 85 toward

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

65

the reader and the number 95 means the diagram dips at an angle of 85 but away from the reader.
One section was cut from each oriented sample perpendicular to planar and/or linear structures. The sections were cut perpendicular to flow fold axes of the Lithonia gneiss, perpendicular to the mica lineation and foliation of the muscovite quartzite, and perpendicular to the axes of muscovite fluctuation in the Stone Mountain granite.

Fabric Diagrams
Three mica diagrams of the Lithonia gneiss (Plate 7, diagrams M1-M3) show nearly complete girdles about an axis which corresponds to the axes of flow folds in the gneiss. S2-surfaces (Hills, 1943, pp. 149-152) parallel to megascopic banding are found in all three diagrams; and in addition, S3-surfaces (microscopic foliation), oriented 30 counterclockwise from S2, are found in diagrams M1 and M3.
In diagram M4 of the muscovite quartzite, two S2-surfaces separated by an angle of 20 are bisected by the megascopic foliation.
The axes of mica girdles in diagrams M5 and M6 of the Stone Mountain granite correspond to megascopic axes of muscovite fluctuation. S2-surfaces (mica maxima) are parallel to megascopic flowage foliation.

Quartz diagrams of the Lithonia gneiss (Q1-Q3) contain partial to complete girdles which correspond to the mica girdles. Maxima 4, 5, and 7 of Fairbairn (1949, p. 10 Figure 2-1) are also found in these diagrams.

Diagram Q4 of the muscovite quartzite shows maxima 1

of Fairbairn.

'

Diagram Q5 of the Stone Mountain granite shows a quartz girdle and also maxima 2 of Fairbairn.

Discussion
Oriented samples of Lithonia gneiss, muscovite quartzite and Stone Mountain granite were selected for petrofabric study to establish the relationship between the megascopic and microscopic structures of these rocks.

66

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

PLATE 7

Petrofabric Diagrams

Sample No.
L4(C) L21(1) L117 (5) C785 C62 (11) A208 L4(C) L21 (1) L117 (5) C785 862(11)

Diagram
M1 M2 M3 M4 M5 M6
Q1
Q2 Q3
Q4
Q5

Mineral

Biotite

Biotite

Biotite

Muscovite

Muscovite

Muscovite

Quartz, large

"

"

"

"

Quartz, strained

Quartz, large

No. of Grains
65 170 118
90 106 150
94 100 138
90 114

Contours ( o/o)
1-2-4-7 1-2-4-6-10 1-2-5-8 1-3-6-10-15 1-2-4-5 1-2-4-6 1-3-5 1-3-5 1-2-4 1-3-6-9-11 1-2-4-7-10

L4(C)-Lithonia gneiss from a small quarry 300 yards S12W of Lithonia.
L21 (1)-Lithonia gneiss from the A. G. Wilson quarry, 1600 yards N20W of Lithonia.
L117 (5)-Lithonia gneiss from the Chapman quarry, 2800 yards N10W of Lithonia.
C785-Muscovite quartzite from a ridge 1200 yards N75W of Norris Lake dam.
S62 (11)-Stone Mountain granite from Flat Rock quarry, 1200 yards N30E of the crest of Stone Mountain.
A208-Stone Mountain granite from the south side of the mountain.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

67

PLATE 7

- - - - J r-----'S"--'-~ 85

68

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Fabric diagrams of muscovite and quartz in Stone Moun~ tain granite reveal girdles and S2-surfaces. These fabrics verify megascop'ic structures such as flowage foliation and axes of muscovite fluctuation which were measured in the field.
The fabric diagrams of mica and quartz in specimens of Lithonia gneiss reveal mica and quartz girdles whose axes are parallel to axes of flow folds measured in the field. The diagrams also contain S-surfaces, one which (S2) is parallel to the megascopic banding, and the other (S3) which is ori~ ented 30 counterclockwise from S2. The S3-surface may represent a plane formed by rotation during folding which is not always identifiable megascopically.
The intersection of the S2-surfaces in the mica diagram of muscovite quartzite (M4) is parallel to the mica lineation measured in the field. In addition to being stretched, the muscovite is slightly rotated out of the megascopic foliation plane. The C-axes of quartz in the quartz diagram (Q4) are oriented perpendicular to the mica lineation and down the dip of the megascopic foliation. The meaning of this orientation is not known.

PETROGENESIS
ORIGIN OF THE LITHONIA GNEiSS
General Statement '
Three samples of highly contorted Lithonia gneiss (Table 6), analyzed by T. L. Watson, had chemical compositions of silica-rich granites. The writer sampled the gneiss in more detail to determine local changes in composition.
Banding and Garnetiferous Layers
The explanation of the origin of the banding of the Lithonia gneiss must take the following features into consideration: (1) the concordance of the contact of the Lithonia gneiss with the schistosity of the overlying mica schist; (2) the conformity of the banding of the Lithonia gneiss to the contact with the mica schist; (3) the presence of quartz-rich garnetiferous layers within the Lithonia gneiss whose band-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

69

ing is usually parallel to that of the gneiss; and (4) the presence of drag-folded layers within the Lithonia gneiss.
Neither discordant nor disconformable relationships exist in any locality in which the contact was observed. Thus, an igneous origin of the banding is very unlikely, for as Daly (1914, p. 99) states, "a leading characteristic of stock or batholith is that its contact-surfaces usually truncate the planes of stratification or schistosity of the invaded formations".
Lester (1939, pp. 841-847) discussed the origin of the garnetiferous layers in the Lithonia gneiss and concluded that they were segregations of a granite magma. He stated (p. 847) that "the segregations are therefore considered to be the result of convection currents in a differentiating magma, rising almost vertically and bringing up garnet bands which were fractured and faulted by a shifting of the mass shortly before final consolidation". He gave no detailed petrographic description of the layers, although he did state that "the mineral within the limits of the width of the individual band is entirely garnet; but several bands of garnet may form the segregation band, and between the garnet bands is found granite gneiss" (p. 845). However, only a trace of potash feldspar was found in the light bands between garnet bands in four thin sections of garnetiferous layers studied by the writer. Thus, the light bands between garnet bands are not granite gneiss. Furthermore, the light bands between garnet bands are rich in free quartz (Table 1, S150 (5) ) . The rock has a granoblastic texture, common in metasediments but rare in igneous rocks.
The abundance of free quartz in the garnetiferous layers would exclude the possibility that they were differentiated from a magma.
The lack of intrusive phenomena at the contact between the Lithonia gneiss and the overlying mica schist, and the lack of inclusions of mica schist within the Lithonia gneiss make it seem unlikely that the garnetiferous layers are recrystallized xenoliths.
The writer believes the quartz-rich garnetiferous layers are the recrystallized equivalents of impure argillaceous quartzite beds of an original sedimentary formation. Drag-folded layers in the gneiss at Mile Rock (Figure 20; Figure 21) may be

70

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

relic beds of the same sedimentary formation, but this cannot be confirmed.
The fact that the banding of the Lithonia gneiss is conformable to the concordant contact .with the mica schist, and the fact that the banding usually is parallel to the banding of quartz-rich garnetiferous layers of probable sedimentary derivation, suggests that the present banding of the Lithonia gneiss is parallel to the bedding of a sedimentary formation prior to metamorphism. The original formation probably consisted of a thick sequence of thinly laminated argillites with local, thicker, impure argillaceous quartzite layers. Metamorphism completely recrystallized the rock, changing the bedding to banding.
Shearing during deformation of the region further obliterated the original bedding. Finally, the introduction of magmatic (aplitic) material along the banding emphasized the banded nature of the highly altered rock.

Potash Metasomatism
The introduction of syntectonic aplite veins which form an intimate part of the gneiss was accompanied by replacement. The replacement was one of potasl;l metasomatism. Potash.; rich (aplite) solutions attacked and replaced oligoclase and biotite forming muscovite with associated quartz, epidote, and calcite (Figure 7). The amount of muscovite which formed probably depended on the MgO :FeO available from the replacement of biotite. After this ratio was satisfied, the remaining potash-rich solutions formed the microcline which also replaced oligoclase (Figure 8) and muscovite.
The replacement of oligoclase by muscovite and microcline caused a release of calcium and sodium into the system equal to the amount contained in the replaced oligoclase. The excess calcium has gone into two new phases, epidote and calcite; and the excess sodium has caused an overall increase in the albite molecule of the plagioclase (Figure 11).
Potash metasomatism is also shown by chemical analyses of the gneiss from several localities. Three samples of well banded gneiss from the interior of the mass (Table 6, nos. 1, 2, and 3) show a high percentage of K20, whereas two samples from near the contact with mica schist show a low percentage of K 2 0 (Table 6, nos. 4 and 5).

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

71

TABLE 6

Chemical Analyses* of the Evenly Banded Phase of the Lithonia Gneiss

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

Si02 ------------------------

Al203 ----------------------

~ Fe20s
FeO

--

CaO ------------------------

MgO ----------------------

K20 ------------------------

Na20 ----------------------

SOs --------------------------

Ignition ------------------

Undetermined --------

76.00 13.11
0.92
1.06 0.27 4.69 3.88
0.31

75.16 13.74
0.91
0.91 0.17 5.05 3.76
0.32

Total ......................100.24 100.02

72.96 14.70
1.28 1.28 0.07 4.73 4.18
0.23
99.43

72.83 17.71
2.29
1.88 0.75 1.90 2.12
0.00 0.50

69.66 17.42
3.92
3.63 1.32 0.76 2.58 0.72 0.00 0.00

99.98 100.01

*Analyses 1-3 obtained from Watson (1902, p. 355). Analyses 4 and 5 performed in 1951 in the Laboratory of the Georgia Department of Mines by L. H. Turner, Chief Chemist.

(1)-Lithonia gneiss from the Coffey quarry on Mile Rock, west of Arabia Mountain (formerly the Crossley quarry).
(2)-Lithonia gneiss from Arabia Mountain.
(3)-Lithonia gneiss from the Davidson Brothers Quarry, located one mile north of Lithonia, Ga. (Formerly the Southern Granite Co. Quarry).
(4) -Evenly banded Lithonia gneiss from a small quarry near the contact with mica schist, approximately 500 yards west of Arabia Lake.
(5)-Partially weathered, evenly banded Lithonia gneiss from Evans Mill, just south of the dam (one and one-half miles west of Arabia Lake).

Migmatization
According to Sederholm (1907, p. 110), a migmatite is a mixed rock composed of an older gneiss (or schist) injected by later granitic magma. The Lithonia gneiss conforms to this definition in that it has been intimately injected by syntectonic aplite veins. The introduced aplite has altered the rock into a granite (compositionally) by addition and metasomatism.
The change in composition from a normal biotite-rich gneiss into a well-banded biotite gneiss with a granitic composition by the introduction of granitic (aplite) solutions is illustrated in Figure 38. The ratio of oligoclase to microcline, recalcu-

72

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

lated to 100%, is plotted against the anorthite content of oligoclase. The biotite-rich phase contains a high percentage of oligoclase (An15-An17 ) and a low percentage of micro cline. The aplite phase contains a low percentage of oligoclase (An1o) and a high percentage of microcline. The well-banded phase contains an intermediate percentage of oligoclase (Ann-An14) and microcline, as would be expected if the biotite-rich and aplite phases were mixed.

The ultimate limit of the migmatizing process may have been the 'complete melting of the gneiss locally (partial anatexis, Eskola, 1933, p. 12) forming intrusive granite dikes. The evidence for this phenomenon can be seen in the Davidson Brother's Big Ledge Quarry, one-half mile north of Lithonia, in which massive granite dikes (Figure 39) of the same mineralogical composition as the gneiss are intrusive in the gneiss.

The. origin of the Lithonia gneiss corresponds very strikingly to the origin of the rocks in Eskola's crustal zone no. 2 (1933, pp. 23-24). According to him (pp. 23-24) it is "the zone of intrusions and of injection and potash metasomatism. - - - The invaded rocks are increasingly changed in composition by the introduction of granitic material, mainly ap-

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Fig. 38. Variation diagram showing the change in feldspar content between several phaseli of the Lithonia gneiss. Ratio of oligoclase: microcline recalculated to 100%.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

73

pearing as a potash metasomatism, and imbibition with potash feldspar. Rocks close to granites in composition may be granitized - - -".

\.

I

I

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/

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Fig. 39. Homogeneous granite dike intruded into the Lithonia gneiss at the Big Ledge Quarry.
ORIGIN OF THE AMPHIBOLITES
General Statement
Any explanation of the origin of the amphibolites of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia district must take into account the following features: (1) The presence of concordant amphibolite layers and lenses throughout the metamorphic series; (2) The conformability of the banding of the amphibolites with the banding of the enclosing rocks; (3) The wide range in size of the individual amphibolite layers; (4) The nearly uniform chemical composition of the amphibolites throughout the district; and (5) The abundance of partially rounded sphene grains in the amphibolites.
The chemical analyses of three amphibolite samples from widely separated localities are given in Table 2, nos. C79, C1486, C1060. These analyses show that the bulk composi-

74

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

tion of the amphibolites changes very little throughout the area. Nor does the composition show any change at various distances from the contact of the Lithonia gneiss. They must, therefore, have approximately the same composition at the present time that they had prior to metamorphism.
Igneous Origin
The possibility that the amphibolites were originally basic igneous sills in the metamorphic series seems valid in light of their chemical composition, although one would expect to find more evidence of discordant contact relationships.
If the amphibolites were originally igneous flows or ash deposits, the conformable structures and uniformity in composition could be explained. However, the presence of amphibolites throughout the metamorphic series would necessarily entail the continuance of volcanic activity throughout a long period of geologic time. The abundance of partially rounded sphene grains in the amphibolites argues for transport and deposition regardless of the nature of the parent material.
Sedimentary Origin
The theory of formation of amphibolites by the metamorphism of sedimentary rock has gained considerable favor among geologists in the past decade. Adams and Barlow (1910) concluded that some of the amphibolites of the Haliburton and Bancroft Area, Ontario, were formed by metamorphism of limestone under the effects of an intruding granite batholith. They state (p. 104) that "the crystalline limestone can be seen, under the influence of the granite intrusion, to have changed into a typical hornblende feldspar amphibolite, passing through the intervening stage of a pyroxene scapolite-hornblende feldspar amphibolite (pyroxene scapolite gneiss)".
More recently Kesler (1944), in a study of the Kings Mountain Area, North Carolina, found the following gradation away from~ granite contact: (1) schist with interlayered hornblende gneiss; (2) a series of carbonate-silicate rocks; (3) limestone. He concluded that the mafic silicate rocks were originally carbonate rocks of the Gaffney formation completely reconstituted by granitic emanations (pp. 777 and 778).

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

75

In the Stone Mountain area there is no evidence of the formation of amphibolites by reconstitution of carbonate rocks; however, there is no reason why they could not have originated from the metamorphism of sedimentary rocks of appropriate chemical composition. For example, a Carboniferous shale from Elliott County, Kentucky (Table 7) has a composition similar to that of the amphibolites of the Stone Mountain area (cp. analyses C79, C1486, C1060, Table 2). However, from a total of 60 samples of shales and slates, only the above shale approaches the composition of the amphibolites.

TABLE 7 Chemical Analysis of a Carboniferous Shale*
SiOz AbO:J Fez03 FeO MgO CaO Na20 KzO Ti02 P205 MnO 41.32 20.71 2.59 5.46 1.91 9.91 7.19 0.88 0.48 0.08 0.17

'''"analysis of an indurated Carboniferous shale in contact with the peridotite dike of Elliott Co., Ky." (Clark, F. W., Analyses of Rocks1880-1903. U. S. Geological Survey Bull. 228, 1904, p. 343.)

ORIGIN OF THE BIOTITE-HORNBLENDE GNEISS
The biotite-hornblende gneiss grades into amphibolite along its strike, 1700 yards N45W of Bermuda. Hence, it may be a facies (igneous or sedimentary) of the amphibolites.
However, the formation of a moth-eaten texture in the hornblende grains by embayment of plagioclase, quartz, biotite, and/or epidote indicates that the biotite-hornblende gneiss may have been formed by partial replacement of a hornblende gneiss by silica-rich solutions.
ORIGIN OF THE STONE MOUNTAIN GRANITE
The igneous (intrusive) origin of the Stone Mountain granite is shown by its uniformity in mineralogical composition (Table 5), the formation of numerous, discordant dikes, and the conformity of its flow structures to the discordant contacts with the intruded gneiss.

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STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

METAMORPHISM
GENERAL STATEMENT
The metamorphic rocks of the district are placed in either the staurolite-kyanite or the sillimanite-almandine subfacies of the amphibolite facies (Turner, 1948, pp. 81 and 85) on the basis of the index minerals hornblende, pyroxene, epidote, plagioclase, sillimanite, and kyanite. The schists and gneisses immediately surrounding the Lithonia gneiss were progressively metamorphosed from the regional staurolite-kyanite level to the sillimanite-almandine level. The line which divides these two subfacies is estimated to lie between the last occurrence of epidote and the first occurrence of pyroxene in the amphibolites, and the last occurrence of kyanite and the first occurrence of sillimanite in the mica schist-muscovite quartzite series.

STAUROLITE-KYANITE SUBFACIES
The index minerals for this subfacies are hornblende, epidote, plagioclase, and kyanite. Epidote, although not a normal phase of the amphibolite facies, is stable in the epidote amphibolites by virtue of the high CaO :Na20 ratio (13:1). This relationship is brought out by Turner (1948, p. 82) who states, "from the very nature of the parent rocks [amphibolites], biotite and quartz are inconspicuous, while the ratio CaO :Na20 may be sufficiently high to cause the appearance of epidote or zoisite as an additional phase." The amount of CaO above that used in the formation of andesine is taken up largely in the formation of epidote.

SILLIMANITE-ALMANDINE SUBFACrES
The index minerals for this subfacies are hornblende, diopside, sillimanite, and plagioclase.

MINERALOGICAL CHANGES DURING PROGRESSIVE METAMORPHISM
In addition to the transition from kyanite to sillimanite in mica schist, hornblende, epidote, pyroxene, and plagioclase of the amphibolites show diagnostic changes as a result of progressive metamorphism. Inasmuch as the amphibolites retain a fairly consistent chemical composition throughout

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

77

the area (Table 2, Nos., C79, C148, and C1060) any mineralogical changes in them must have been the result of internal reconstitution.
Hornblende shows a decrease in the size of 2V from 75 to 69 and an increase in the index of refraction, Ny, from 1.666 to 1.677; diopside (Die5Hes5) substitutes for epidote; and plagioclase changes from sodic to calcic andesine in the transition from epidote to pyroxene amphibolite.
According to Sundius (1946, Figures 8 and 10) the above changes in optical properties of the hornblendes indicate a decrease in Mg and an increase in the percentage of Fe" and Fe" ' in the transition from the staurolite-kyanite to the sillimanite-almandine subfacies. The release of Mg into the system could be utilized in the formation of diopside.
The excess calcium which is released by the transition from epidote to diopside is accounted for by the increase in the anorthite content of the plagioclase in the pyroxene amphibolites.
Biotite shows very little change in composition regardless of the metamorphic grade of the rocks in which it occurs.

CAUSES OF METAMORPHISM
The metamorphic rocks of the district are thought to represent original sediments which have been highly deformed. The high degree of deformation is evident in the longitudinal and transverse folds of the metamorphic rocks, the obliteration of bedding, the formation of schistosity and banding, and the regional metamorphism to the staurolite-kyanite amphibolite subfacies.
Increased temperature and stresses probably gave rise to the regional metamorphism because, according to Turner (1948, p. 81), the main cause of metamorphism to the staurolite-l{yanite subfacies is "strong deformation under high pressure and shearing stress".
Renewed deformation of the region by uplift of the Lithonia gneiss folded the previously formed schistosity and banding. This deformation, which perhaps took place during the Appalachian Revolution, was accompanied or followed by the migmatization of the Lithonia gneiss by emanations

78

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

from a deep-seated magma which is represented by the Stone Mountain pluton and aplite and pegmatite dikes. The heat evolved from this magma progressively metamorphosed the rocks surrounding the Lithonia gneiss from the staurolitekyanite to the sillimanite-almandine amphibolite subfacies.
The migmatizing solutions were not entirely limited to the Lithonia gneiss. The mica schist was considerably altered in the area south of Arabia Mountain where pegmatitic veins changed the schist into an augen gneiss. In places the schist grades into a rock which very closely resembles the Lithonia gneiss, even to the extent of containing shear zones.

GEOLOGICAL IDSTORY AND CONCLUSIONS
The migmatitic and metasedimentary rocks of the district are thought to have been originally deposited as a thick sedimentary sequence. The Lithonia gneiss was perhaps deposited in a basin of moderate depth as thinly bedded sandy to argillaceous sediments with occasional thicker impure argillaceous sandstone layers. The mica schist-quartzite formation was deposited conformably over the Lithonia sediments as a sequence of shales and sandstones that contained some argillaceous sandstones, shales, and possibly volcanic flows or ash deposits. The deposition probably took place in pre-Cambrian time.
Deformation (during the pre-Cambrian ?), coupled, with an increase in temperature, metamorphosed the rocks to the kyanite grade. This deformation and recrystallization might have produced the secondary planar structures, schistosity and banding. Relic bedding may be preserved in the form of compositional interlayering.
Renewed deformation in the form of uplift of the Lithonia gneiss is believed to be Appalachian in age because the major axis of uplift, b, is approximately parallel to the trend of the Appalachian Mountains.
Longitudinal northeast trending folds in the mica schistquartzite formation were refolded into transverse northwest trending folds. At the same time the other metamorphic rocks were also deformed into transverse folds.
During deformation, the Lithonia gneiss was injected and

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

79

replaced by syntectonic, magmatic, potash-rich solutions. This process altered the Lithonia gneiss into a well-banded granite (in composition). Relics of the original bedding probably remain as quartz-rich garnetiferous layers parallel to the gneissic banding. The banding was contorted into minor folds which trend in a northeasterly direction.
Potash-rich solutions from an underlying magma produced a thermal metamorphic aureole around the Lithonia gneiss. This increased the metamorphic grade from the staurolitekyanite to the sillimanite-almandine subfacies of the amphibolite facies.
In a late stage of the uplift, the Lithonia gneiss and its garnetiferous layers were sheared along a pronounced set of shear zones trending N25 E and a less pronounced set trending N40W.
Movement perpendicular to b produced a strong mica lineation in the Lithonia gneiss and in the metamorphic series. This lineation, a, trends in a northwesterly direction, parallel to minor fold axes.
The Stone Mountain granite intruded the metasediments after the major deformation had been completed. The granite not only lacks the regional mica lineation, but actually deflects the lineation in the vicinity of Stone Mountain. Because the intrusion may have taken place at a late stage of the Appalachian deformation, it is tentatively assigned a Permian age.
A major set of cross joints (a'c') is perpendicular to the mica lineation. Triassic diabase dikes were intruded parallel to northwest trending joints. The diabase dikes are assumed to be Triassic in age because of their similarity with dikes of known Triassic age in other regions, and also because they intrude the Stone Mountain granite (Permian?) but fail to intrude the Cretaceous sediments of the Georgia Coastal Plain.
Quaternary alluvium is still being deposited as stream gravels.
Mica and quartz fabric diagrams substantiate structural data measured in the field.

80

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

THE STONE INDUSTRY
HISTORY
The rock types of the district suitable for building and monumental stone attracted attention early in the history of the region because of their hard, unweathered surfaces. The natural ledges caused by sheeting* simplified quarrying but their partially weathered sap surfaces (Watson, 1902, p. 326) made the rocks unsuitable for purposes other than foundation stones, chimneys stones, and steps. The desire for hard, unaltered stone, unobtainable from the natural ledges, led to the method of raising ledges of any desired thickness by artificial means (see Quarrying Methods). The ability to raise ledges has been one of the major factors in the early and continued success of the stone industry.
Few records of quarrying in the region date back very far, but Watson (1902, p. 111) noted that tombstones were made about 1845 or 1850 and that some stone was quarried from Stone Mountain prior t'o the Civil War. The Stone Mountain Granite and Railway Company and their successors, the Venable Brothers, who operated quarries on Stone Mountain beginning in 1869, were the first to produce stone on a large scale. During their peak production the Venable Brothers quarried 20,000 carloads of stone from two large quarries on the south side of Stone Mountain. The output was transported from the quarries to the Georgia Railway on a spur which ran around the west side of the mountain.
Prior to 1900 the Venable Brothers also owned a large portion of the exposed rock (Lithonia gneiss) in the vicinity of Lithonia. Their major holdings were Little Stone Mountain (Pine Mountain) and most of Arabia Mountain. Pine Mountain was first worked in 1883 according to Watson (1902, p. 142) and by 1900 was supplying a large quantity o:f Belgian blocks, curb stone, road ballast, and dimension stone.
At the beginning of the 20th Century there were no major stone producers in the area other than the Venable Brothers. The Southern Granite Company owned a five acre quarry at the present site of the Davidson Granite Company's Big Ledge
*Sheeting is the term used to describe the nearly horizontal joints of granites and similar rocks.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

81

Quarry and also owned the Collinsville Mountain Quarries. The Georgia Railroad owned a quarry on the exposure southwest of Little Stone Mountain and, in addition, owned a quarry in conjunction with Mrs. Mary Reagin located near the DeKalb-Rockdale County line, just north of the railroad tracks.
Quarrying of the Stone Mountain granite declined after 1900 due to lessened demand for this type of stone. The decline was not due to lack of beauty but rather to the inability of the stone to stand up under prolonged weathering. Weathering causes the surface of building blocks to change color from a sparkling white to a dull gray, and causes the surface of polished monumental stone to lose much of its luster. On the other hand, the demand for Lithonia gneiss increased because of its hardness and color retaining quality, and the abundance of easily accessible stone in the Lithonia area.
The Venable Granite Company was succeeded in Lithonia by the Davidson Granite Company, started in 1895 by J. K. Davidson, Sr. Mr. Davidson immigrated from Scotland and began work as a quarry laborer, but in a few years he was in business for himself. During the first year of operation he produced a relatively small number of paving blocks from quarries leased at Collinsville Mountain; but from these meager beginnings he built the business into a large enterprise which now produces all of the dimension stone of the district and much of the rubble, curb stone, crushed stone, and jetty stone. He also pioneered in the manufacture of poultry grit which, according to experiments of the Quaker Oats Company, aids in the assimilation of feed by grinding it more thoroughly. A large plant at the site of the Big Ledge Quarry is used solely for the production of poultry grit and crushed stone. The old plant burned down in the late spring of 1950 and was replaced by a new, modern plant. The company is now owned by Mr. Davidson's sons.
In 1950, the company owned approximately 1500 acres of exposed gneiss in the vicinity of Lithonia. Their main property is the Big Ledge Quarry, previously owned by the Southern Granite Company, to which has been added the adjoining Abrams and Braswell properties. The Davidson Granite Company succeeded the Venable Brothers as owners of the

82

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Pine Mountain and Arabia Mountain Quarries. From the Big Ledge and Pine Mountain Quarries comes the total dimension stone, curb stone, and jetty stone production of the company.
In 1900 there were small crushing plants at the Georgia Railroad and Pine Mountain quarries to convert the quarry waste into road metal and ballast, but the small demand for crushed stone at that time did not warrant the operation of a separate quarry for this purpose. With the advent of the automobile more and better roads were needed. To supply this need the Consolidated Quarry Corporation opened a quarry at Rock Chapel Mountain in April, 1929, which produced 150,000 tons of stone the first year. Production from this plant increased to over 1,000,000 tons of crushed stone in 1949 under the direction of Nelson Severinghaus, vicepresident and general manager.
The Davidson Granite Company crushing plant at the Big Ledge quarry was opened prior to the Consolidated plant, but its output is mostly in the form of poultry grit with only a small amount used as ballast and concrete aggregate.
During the 1930's the Works Progress Administration leased the DeKalb County quarry north of Little Stone Mountain and the Flat Rock quarry north of Stone Mountain. Small crushing plants were built to produce crushed stone for road ballast and concrete aggregate used in the administration's building programs.

At the present time the Davidson Granite Company and the Consolidated Quarry Corporation are the only major producers of the district, but there are several smaller producers who add considerably to the total output. The Kellogg Granite Company, operated by A. B. Kellogg, produces a combined total of 25,000 tons of rubble and 100,000 lineal feet of rough curb stone per year from quarries on the north side of Rock Chapel Mountain and the east side of Stone Mountain. The entire production from these quarries is sold by the Consolidated Quarry Corporation.

The Coffey Granite Company, owned by G. A. Coffey, had an estimated output of 25,000 to 30,000 tons of rubble and 75,000 to 100,000 lineal feet of rough curb stone in 1950 from quarries on the south side of Mile Rock, west o Arabia

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

83

Mountain. Other smaller quarries produce a proportionately lesser amount of stone.
The total stone production of the district in 1949 was more than 1,400,000 tons, valued at well over $3,000,000. By comparison, the most productive year noted in Watson's report was 1891 when the value of all the granite and gneiss produced in Georgia was $790,000. The increase in value and production, which has occurred at the same time that market areas have diminished due to greater shipping costs, can be directly related to the development of new markets supplied by the greater plant facilities of the two major producers.

TYPES OF STONE

Stone Mountain Granite (Quartz-Monzonite)
The Stone Mountain granite (quartz-monzonite) is a fineto medium-grained, almost pure white stone with a faint planar structure or foliation produced by parallel orientation of mica flakes. It is relatively hard, but easily quarried because of its pronounced rift and grain.
The rock has a rather constant composition throughout its areal distribution except for the more biotitic phases in the vicinity of Lithonia. It has an average composition of approximately 30% quartz, 31% oligoclase, 28% microcline,
10% muscovite, 1%% biotite, and traces of other minerals
including epidote, garnet, apatite, zircon, pyrite, rutile, sericite, and calcite. In the vicinity of Stone Mountain the rock has slightly more oligoclase than microcline, but near Centerville and Redan the proportions are reversed. A rock of this composition falls into the quartz-monzonite category of most igneous rock classifications. For this reason it is reclassified as a quartz-monzonite in this report although the name granite is retained in its broad meaning as a light colored, mediumgrained igneous rock.
Viewed from a distance the stone appears homogenous, but close inspection reveals a quite noticeable foliation due to a small amount of biotite mixed with muscovite. The foliation is made more pronounced in some parts of the exposure by the presence of mica patches or autoliths flattened in the plane of foliation (Fig. 33). Small tourmaline clusters in the

84

STONE MOUNTAiN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

rock on the east and south sides of Stone Mountain give it a spotted appearance locally (Fig. 37).

Lithonia Gneiss
The Lithonia gneiss is a very hard gray-white stone with a pronounced highly deformed and sheared band,ing. The individual bands are composed of white quartz and feldspar layers alternating with thin biotite-rich layers. The gneiss is well suited for general building purposes and street curbing because of its ease of quarrying and ability to withstand weathering. Locally the stone contains an objectionable amount of pyrite which readily changes to limonite, staining the rock with brown streaks.
The composition of the gneiss is quite variable because of the numerous biotite-rich, garnet-epidote, and quartz-rich layers in many exposures. In addition, many quartz and aplite veins and granite and pegmatite dikes intimately intrude the gneiss. Typical mineral compositions of several of the rock types are given in Table 1.
Texturally the rock is xenoblastic (grains are without crystal shape) and slightly inequigranular. Grain boundaries are irregular and frequently serrate or "saw-toothed" and replacement textures are common.
The structures of the gneiss most commonly referred to in the section on description of quarries are banding, contortions or flow folds, shear zones, biotite orientation or lineation, rift and grain. The banding has been described above, but perhaps the other terms need some explanation. The contortions or flow folds are small flexures of the banding which have a small amplitude, usually no more than one foot in height. These flexures are frequently accompanied by shear zones which occur as small healed breaks across the banding, commonly filled with white aplite veins. In the quarries, the majority of the shear zones trend in a north northeast direction and a minority trend in a northwesterly direction. The biotite lineation is a stretching of individual biotite flakes in a northwest-southeast direction and can best be seen in stone which has been split parallel to the banding. The rift of the stone is the easiest direction of splitting and is parallel to the surface. Natural rift planes are known as

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

85

sheeting planes. The grain of the stone is the second easiest direction of splitting and is always perpendicular to the rift, but it trends in a different direction in every quarry.

Panola Granite
The Panola granite is a mass of igneous rock of limited areal extent located near the southeastern corner of DeKalb County. It forms a small prominence south of Panola known as Hog Mountain. The rock is unlike the Stone Mountain granite or the Lithonia gneiss in structure, texture and composition. It shows no visible structure but has a pronounced porphyritic texture formed by small phenocrysts (crystals) of microcline. A sample of the rock taken from the Bowers quarry at Panola showed a large number of thin epidote veins filling the fractures. Under the microscope the individual minerals are almost equigranular except for occasional large microcline phenocrysts. The mineral composition of the rock, in order of abundance, is microcline, quartz, oligoclase (plagioclase), and biotite with accessory amounts of muscovite, epidote, apatite, magnetite, rutile, and chlorite. The quartz is strained and the microcline is highly altered to muscovite and sericite. The biotite is slightly altered to chlorite.
Because so little of this stone has been quarried, its qualities as a building stone are not known. The stone at the Bowers quarry is contaminated by many epidote veins but surface examination of the larger mass at Hog Mountain indicates that they are scarce or absent there. As far as the writer knows, no physical tests have been made on the stone to determine its durability.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF GRANITE AND GNEISS
General Statement
The physical characteristics of granite and gneiss include hardness, crushing strength, structure, texture, mineral composition and color. The combination of these characteristics determines the desirability and the economic value of the stone. Although they were described thoroughly by Watson (1902), some additional information will be given here.

86

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Hardness
The hardness of a rock is a measure of its ability to withstand abrasion and is dependent on its internal constitution. The hardness of a mineral is determined by the atomic structure and type of atoms or molecules making up the structure, whereas the hardness of a rock is determined by the type and arrangement of the constituent minerals:
Most granites and gneisses are very hard because the two main constituents, quartz and feldspar, are hard. The hardness of these rocks is further increased by the tightly interlocking texture of the mineral grains.
The hardness decreases with the age of the stone because of the weathering agencies of oxidation, carbonation, and hydration. The minerals most susceptible to weathering. are the feldspars, orthoclase (or microcline) and plagioclase, which alter to clay. This alteration loosens the interlocking texture and causes the stone to crumble in the most advanced stages of decay.
Crushing Strength
Crushing strength tests made on Lithonia gneiss and Stone Mountain granite at the Washington Navy Yard in 1887 (Watson, 1902, p. 54) showed that the former rock type had a range in strength from approximately 13,000 to over 21,000 pounds per square inch, and Stone Mountain granite had a range from approximately 12,000 to over 21,000 pounds per square inch. These values are well above the maximum strength required of stone used for structural purposes.

Structure
Each of the three building stones of the district has a different structure. The Lithonia gneiss has a pronounced banding which is strongly contorted and sheared. The Stone Mountain granite has a weak to strong foliation or flow structure, and the Panola granite is essentially devoid of any structure. These structures have no apparent effect on the durability of the stone since none of the rocks will break parallel to the structures more readily than across them, nor do they weather (decompose) more easily in one direction than another.
The structure of the rock, especially the Lithonia gneiss,

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

87

does effect the economic value of the stone. The numerous pegmatite dikes and veins, the quartz veins, and the pink garnetiferous layers all effect the quarrying operations because these portions of the rock cannot be used. In addition, the stone does not break properly across these features. The pegmatite dikes in the Stone Mountain granite have the same effect, although they are not so objectionable since they are not so numerous.

Texture
The textures of the building stones of the district are similar, in that the mineral grains composing the stones are tightly interlocked, forming very compact and strong bonds. It is this texture which helps give the rocks a high crushing strength and hence makes them very suitable for structural purposes.

Mineral Composition
The minerals composing the several rock types are essentially the same. Each type contains quartz, oligoclase, microcline, biotite, muscovite and accessory amounts of garnet, epidote, magnetite, zircon, etc., but in slightly different proportions.

Color
The color of the building stones of the district depends on the mineral composition mentioned above. If it were not for the minor constituents, the rocks would all be white because quartz, oligoclase, and microcline are white or colorless. However, in the case of the Lithonia gneiss the chief accessory, biotite, forms about 3 percent by volume of the rock, and this is concentrated in thin bands giving the rock a graywhite appearance. The Panola granite also contains about 3 percent of biotite, but it is scattered throughout the rock, giving it a gray color. The Stone Mountain granite, on the other hand, has about 9 percent muscovite and only about 1 percent biotite, giving the rock a very faint gray color.
An important color consideration, although not directly related to the original color of the rock, is the presence of minor amounts of easily oxidized iron bearing minerals. The chief of these is pyrite, an iron sulfide, which tends to de-

88

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

compose readily to limonite, an iron oxide. If this mineral occurs in sufficient amounts, as it does in portions of the Lithonia gneiss, it renders the stone useless or of lesser economic value. This feature can be seen in some of the quarries where large areas of the surface are badly iron-stained.

QUARRYING METHODS
Building Stone
The demand for any particular type of building stone depends upon its beauty, durability, and price. Inasmuch as the building stones of this district fulfill the requirements of beauty and durability, the price, which depends on quarrying and shipping costs, becomes the most important factor.
Rough building stone can be produced and sold in the vicinity of Atlanta at a cost comparable to the cost of brick because of the ease of quarrying. Quarrying is inexpensive because layers of desired thickness can be "raised". This property depends on the natural ability of the rock to split along rift planes parallel to the surface.
The method of raising ledges was discovered early in the history of the district. The process is begun by drilling a hole in the rock to a depth equal to the thickness of the desired ledge. A small charge of blasting powder is placed in the bottom of the hole; and, after filling the hole with clay, the charge is set off. Successively larger charges are set off in the hole over a period of six months, and finally the hole is cleared out in preparation for forcing compressed air into the opening. The last step in the process is usually withheld until a very hot day when the pressure of the air plus the differential expansion of the rock cause the rock to rift over a large surface area.
Quarrying is started at the place where the rift plane intersects the surface, or "runs out" as the quarryman puts it. The quarry face becomes progressively higher as quarrying proceeds because of the slightly wedge~shaped cross section of the raised ledge.
Before quarrying can begin, the direction of easiest breaking of the rock, the grain or run, must be determined. This direction may be known if the exposure has already been

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

89

quarried; or, in the case of a new exposure, the direction can be determined by trial and error or by noting the most prominent jointing direction.
Rough stone such as rubble and curbing, which requires a minimum of plant and equipment, is produced by many small operators who hire only a few men to work the stone with jack hammers, plug drills, mallets and wedges. Larger blocks such as jetty and dimension stone are produced only by the large companies because they require much heavier equipment such as large air compressors, trucks, hoists, and a plant to finish the stone.
Crushed Stone
The production of crushed stone requires a much larger plant, and in general, a larger exposure of rock than building stone because a small margin of profit makes necessary a large volume of output. Although there are only two commercial crushed stone producers in the district, the total value of their output in 1949 was over $2,000,000. This is compared with the total value of the stone of the district which slightly exceeded $3,000,000.
The Davidson Granite Company quarries. stone from the Big Ledge quarry for the production of poultry grit and concrete aggregate. The operation begins with the drilling of large holes about ten feet back from the face of the opening with two wagon drills. The holes are drilled as deep as the face is high and then filled with dynamite. After the face is blasted down, the smaller fragments of rock are loaded into Euclid trucks and taken to the initial jaw crusher. The larger blocks of stone are broken into smaller pieces by means of steel balls dropped from derricks.
The Consolidated Quarry Corporation's number one quarry has a 120 foot northern face which is drilled by three 62 inch churn drills. The face is blasted down and the smaller fragments hauled to the initial jaw crusher by six 12 yard side-dump trucks pulled by Mack chain drive cabs. The larger blocks are broken by placing a small explosive charge in holes drilled by jack hammers.
USES OF STONE
In the early history of the district, prior to and even after

90

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

1900, the stone was used mainly for curbing, Belgian blocks, and rubble, and a minor amount was used for monumental and dimension stone purposes. The Belgian blocks and curb stones were transported great distances by rail to be used in St. Louis, Missouri, Baltimore, Maryland, and other large cities. As labor and transportation costs increased, the stone was shipped shorter distances; and with the advent of the automobile and Macadam and asphalt paved highways, the use of Belgian blocks declined and finally ceased. The Stone Mountain granite was found after a time to be poorly suited for monumental stone and its production finally ceased.
Other uses were found to take the place of those that diminished. Crushed stone became an important product, and production of dimensional stock hicreased as the Davidson Granite Company's Pine Mountain plant increased in size. Most of the crushed stone was used for road ballast and concrete aggregate at first, but poultry grit soon became a major outlet. Later, the building of jetties in some southern cities such as Jacksonville, Florida, and New Orieans, Louisiana, opened a new market for the stone. At the present time the Davidson Granite Company produces a combined total of 15,000 tons of rubble and jetty stone, and the Consolidated Quarry Corporation produces 50,000 tons of jetty stone.
New uses for the stone are continually being investigated by the large stone producers. The Consolidated Quarry Corporation is investigating such uses as washed sand for concrete bricks and feldspar for glass, pottery and enamels. Eventually the potash and rare elements may be utilized as fertilizer supplements.

DESCRIPTION OF QUARRIES
GENERAL STATEMENT
The locations of the quarries described below are shown on the quarry map of the district (Plate 8, in pocket) for quick reference. The distances given in the text are only approximate and can be more accurately measured from the map.
The names of many of the quarries do not conform to those of the Watso:n report (1902) because of change in ownership.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

91

In some instances the former name is given in the quarry description.

STONE MOUNTAIN GRANITE (QUARTZ-MONZONITE)
DeKalb County
Block Quarry-Two rather small quarries in Stone Mountain granite, located about three and a half miles southeast of the village of Stone Mountain, are owned by Mr. Bates Block of Atlanta. The larger of the two quarries is only a few hundred feet east of the Wade residence. The smaller one is in a flat-rock exposure about five acres in area, several hundred yards south of the large quarry near the headwaters of Crooked Creek.
The rock is gray-white granite remarkably free from blemishes or inclusions. It contains about twice as much muscovite as brownish biotite. Structures are not pronounced in the rock, but a faint flowage foliation trends N5W and dips 40 E. A strong set of joints strikes N35 W and dips vertically.
Britt Quarry-Mr. Mark Britt of Stone Mountain owns a large quarry two hundred and fifty feet square and up to forty feet deep, located one and one-half miles east of Stone Mountain. It was formerly owned and worked by G. W eiblen and Sons from 1935 to 1946. It was known as the Nash and McCurdy quarry in the Watson report (1902). At present the opening is filled with water.
The rock is typical muscovite-rich granite with a small amount of brown biotite and small pink garnets. On the northwest side of the quarry there are numerous muscoviterich bands and pegmatites within the granite. A large pegmatite at the north end of the pond has an irregular shape with many projecting tongues or fingers. The rock is highly fractured here and many of the horizontal joints contain yellow uranophane.
A pronounced flowage foliation strikes about N60W and dips either north or south on the northwest side of the quarry, and strikes about N50W and dips 35NE on the east side of the quarry. Locally the foliation is erratic. Joints are not common but a small fault trending N40W limits the north end of the quarry.

92

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

The rock is of good quality for general purposes except for the numerous pegmatite and highly micaceous areas. Further work would be hampered, however, by the large amount of water in the opening.

Coffey Quarries-Mr. G. Coffey owns about five acres of ex-

posed rock about two and one-half miles north northwest of

Lithonia. Three quarry openings have been made, the larg-

est of which has a worke.d face one hundred feet long and

three feet high.



The rock is a strongly foliated biotite-rich granite of the Stone Mountain type. It is uniform in texture and composition except for thin muscovite-rich lenses with scattered garnets similar to those found at Stone Mountain. Several coarse-grained pegmatites composed of microcline, quartz, muscovite and biotite have intruded the rock.

The flowage foliation varies in strike from Nl0W to N25W and dips from 15 to 25W. Joints are very rare. The grain of the rock trends N-S.

Edwards Quarry-A very small quarry on the south slope of Swift Creek, three miles north of Lithonia, is owned by Mrs. I. G. Edwards.
The rock is a medium-grained and evenly textured biotiterich muscovite granite. Scatte_red, small, biotite-rich, ellipsoidal inclusions are found throughout the exposure. A pronounced flowage foliation strikes N40W and dips l0NE. A set of joints strikes N35E and dips vertically.

The rock shows pronounced signs of decay, mainly in the kaolinization of the feldspars.

Ethel Quarry-The Ethel quarry is located on a ten acre pavement of granite three miles east of the village of Stone Mountain. The quarry face is two hundred feet long in a northeasterly direction.

Small, disseminated pink garnets are found throughout the rock which is distinctly foliated biotite-bearing muscovite granite. Small, zoned aplite dikes have medium-grained muscovite borders and fine-grained white aplite centers. Irregular pegmatite pods contain small black tourmaline rosettes. Light green damourite occurs on several small slickensided faults.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

93

Flat Rock Quarry-The Flat Rock Quarry is owned by Mr. W. H. Venable of Stone Mountain. It is located approximately one-half mile north of the carving on Stone Mountain.
There are two quarries on the property, a large one on the north (Fig. 40), and a smaller one on the south. The rock in both openings is a medium-grained muscovite granite with small pink garnets scattered throughout. A faint flowage foliation trends approximately N45W and varies in dip from 10 to 40NE. Several steeply dipping faults on the northwest side of the opening are coated with light green damourite.
In the vicinity of the faults tourmaline clusters are abundant, and on the southwest side of the quarry numerous garnet-bearing muscovite inclusions are common. A yellowgreen coating of uranophane is found on many of the horizontal sheeting planes.
The quarry and a small crushing plant now in disuse were

i FLAT ROCK QVARRY, MILE N. OF STONE MOIINTAIN

-3C/JLE.

50

oso

Fig. 40

LEGEND
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70UI{'MAJ.JNe ~UifT.(.(S
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8/0TITE- MV.S(OI"trE .SE6trEt1-4"110N'S
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STH/1('. AND DIP Ol= FJ.0WA6E FOLIATION
,80
STR!k:E. AtiD ])JP 01=- JOINfS
~0
.STI?IKC. AJ./0 DIP OF li'JFT PLAN!!..S
~~
Sl.ICKE.NSIIJE{) JOINTS
/
. .--'
QUARI?Y F,qce.
L.A.J/.11/SO

94

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

operated during the period from 1935 to 1940 by the Works Progress Administration for crushed stone. It is now operated by Mr. Venable for rubble.
Kellogg. Quarry-A large quarry on the east side of Stone Mountain is leased by Arthur Kellogg from the Venable Brothers estate and operated by Otis King. The quarry has been in continuous operation since 1947. It was previously operated by the Stone Mountain Granite Corporation (Weiblen and Sons) from 1916 to 1934, and by the Works Progress Administration from 1935 to 1940.
In 1950 the quarry production was 1200 tons of stone per week, divided into 700 tons of rough curb stone and 500 tons of rubble. Due to the high cost of shipping, the stone is used almost exclusively in the greater Atlanta area.
The stone is good quality biotite-bearing muscovite granite. The mineral composition is given in Table 5, sample number S68. The only flaws in the rock are numerous small tourmaline clusters, and occasional pegmatite dikes and biotite gneiss inclusions (fig. 35). Small ellipsoidal, garnet-bearing, muscovite-biotite .inclusions are found in the rock, oriented parallel to the flowage foliation, which ranges in strike from N20 to N50E and ranges in dip from 30 to 50SE. The grain of the rock trends about N35W in this locality. Rare blue lazulite grains are found in the south ledge of the quarry.
Robertson Quarry-A very small quarry owned by James Robertson is located about four miles southwest of Lithonia and two-thirds of a mile west of Pole Bridge Creek. It is in a large pavement at the crest of a hill trending roughly eastwest.
The rock is a medium-grained, well foliated, biotite-rich granite. Biotite .comprises about two-thirds of the mica but on the weathered surface the muscovite plus bleached biotite give the rock the appearance of typical Stone Mountain granite. The foliation is nearly horizontal.
The rock has been only slightly quarried, apparently for local use.
Sexton Quarry-The stone of the W. E. Sexton quarry, located three miles southeast of Stone Mountain village, is quite variable in character. The rock is muscovite-rich gran-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

95

ite with many micaceous inclusions, tourmaline clusters and small irregular stringers of pegmatite.
The rock is not of acceptable grade for any purpose other than crushed stone. The owner worked it for this purpose for a short time but has since discontinued the operation.
Smith Quarry-A small quarry on the Smith property onehalf mile north of Redan is owned by the Venable Estate of Stone Mountain. The rock is coarse-grained, non-foliated Stone Mountain granite composed of quartz, oligoclase, microcline, muscovite, biotite and small pink garnets. Many small biotite-rich inclusions are found in the rock.
Only a small amount of stone was quarried from this location. The small size of the exposure and the poor quality of the stone make it undesirable for future quarrying.
Venable Estate Quarries-Two large quarries on the south side of Stone Mountain and several smaller quarries on the west and northwest sides of the mountain were formerly owned and operated by the Venable Brothers of Stone Mountain. They are now the property of their successor, the V enable Estate.
The quarries were operated on a large scale about 1900, but have since been closed and the equipment moved. The track of a spur of the Georgia Railroad has also been removed, and the only remainder of the operations are the stone walls of the finishing buildings in which were produced twenty thousand car loads of combined paving blocks, curb stones, building blocks and monumental stone annually (Watson, 1902, p. 113).
The rock is a light-gray biotite-bearing muscovite granite containing occasional pink garnets. Many garnetiferous muscovite-biotite inclusions and tourmaline clusters (Fig. 37) are scattered throughout the rock. Small aplite dikes with radiating tourmaline crystals are numerous in the easternmost quarry. Greenish mica (mariposite?) is associated with the tourmaline in some of the dikes. Figure 32 is a map of one of the quarries on the northwest side of the mountain.
Wells Quarry-A quarry owned by Steven Wells, located a mile and a quarter north of Redan, is situated in fine-grained, evenly textured Stone Mountain granite. It is a light gray

96

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

rock composed of microcline, quartz, oligoclase, muscovite, biotite, and minor amounts of epidote, zircon, and garnet (Table 5, no. L58).
A faint foliation in the rock is barely discernible. Small quartz veins cut the granite in various directions in the quarry. The rock is very good quality, hard, and free from blemishes. It was originally quarried to build the DeKalb County Court House in Decatur.

Gwinnett County

Campbell Property-A ledge has been raised but no quarry-

ing has been done on a several acre pavement of Stone Moun-

tain granite located approximately three quarters of a mile

east of Centerville. The property is owned by Mr. C. M.

Campbell.

'

The rock is good quality biotite-bearing muscovite granite similar to that at Stone Mountain except that it contains a slightly greater proportion of microcline than oligoclase. A faint flowage foliation strikes N55W and dips 20NE. Jointing is not pronounced. Close inspection of the outcrop revealed no blemishes other than a few mica-rich areas. In spite of its good quality the prospects for successful quarrying are unfavorable because of its distance from paved highways and its small areal extent.

PANOLA GRANITE
DeKalb County
Bowers Quarry-A small quarry located on the east side of Georgia Route 155 and south of Yellow River at Panola is owned by Mr. Lincoln Bowers.
The stone is a coarse-grained, porphyritic biotite granite with microcline and biotite phenocrysts up to one-eighth of an inch in diameter. A small amount of magnetite is scattered throughout the rock. The stone is poor quality for quarrying because of the many fractures filled with epidote and chlorite.

Rockdale County
Hog Mountain Property-Hog Mountain is a large dome-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

97

shaped prominence of Panola granite similar to that at the Bowers quarry. The property, owned by Mr. John Yarborough of Atlanta, consists of about 600 acres. A small summer resort has been developed around a dammed lake on the southwest side of the mountain.

LITHONIA GNEISS
DeKalb County
Brand Quarries-The J. T. Brand quarries include about eight openings on a 20 acre exposure of Lithonia gneiss located between Little Stone Mountain and Collinsville Mountain. A large amount of stone was removed from these quarries in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries mostly for Belgian blocks and curb stone.
The rock is typical highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with numerous garnet and magnetite crystals disseminated throughout. Shear zones, flow folds, and garnet-rich epidotebearing layers are common in this exposure.
Chapman Quarry-The Archie Chapman quarry is located about one and one-half miles north of Lithonia, approximately 600 yards east of the Stone Mountain-Lithonia Highway. It contains two openings, the larger of which is 150 feet long, 100 feet wide and up to 15 feet deep.
The rock in the large quarry is a faintly banded, mediumgrained, light gray biotite gneiss with numerous porphyroblasts of microcline and magnetite. The banding has a uniform strike of N15E and ranges in dip from 15-30E.
The banding becomes progressively more deformed to the east, until it reaches the stage of typical highly sheared and contorted Lithonia gneiss in the eastern quarry. The trend of the banding in this quarry is very erratic, and the rock contains many randomly oriented pegmatite veins and dikes.
The rock has not been quarried for several years although that of the large quarry is a good quality, hard stone. Its extent is limited, however, by the increased number of pegmatite dikes to the east which make quarrying difficult.
Clack Quarries-A small dome-shaped mass of exposed Lithonia gneiss, known as McDaniel Mountain, is located ap-

98

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

proximately one mile east of Arabia Mountain and just west of the DeKalb County-Rockdale County line. It is owned by Mrs. Golden Clack.
The stone is typical highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with numerous veins and dikes of pegmatite and aplite. The exposure contains several small abandoned quarries on the western side and a small opening on the eastern side which had been quarried as recently as 1950.
Coffey Quarries-Mr. George A. Coffey of Lithonia owns approximately 50 acres of exposed rock on the south end of Mile Rock, just southwest of Arabia Mountain. He also owns 19 acres south of Bradley Mountain. At the time of the writer's visit in 1950, Mr. Coffey was operating six ledges on the south and southwest sides of Mile Rock and leasing part of his property on a royalty basis to the Reagin Granite Company. Twenty men operating three air compressors, twenty plug drills and two jack hammers produced an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 tons of rubble and 75,000 to 100,000 lineal feet of rpugh curb stone that year.
The rock is typical Lithonia contorted biotite gneiss with numerous garnet and magnetite crystals. Small, dislocated bands of quartz-rich epidote- and garnet-bearing gneiss with a pronounced pink color are common in an abandoned quarry on the west-central portion of the exposure (Figure 20). Locally the rock contains pyrite which weathers to form a limonitic coating on the surface.
The rock is generally extremely contorted with small aplite and pegmatite dikes and veins filling numerous shear zones which trend approximately N20E.
The rock is a good quality, hard stone suitable for general building purposes. The extensive raised ledges on the property insure an almost unlimited supply of stone for the future.
Consolidated Quarry Corporation-The Consolidated Quarry Corporation owns and operates the largest quarry in the region, located on Rock Chapel Mountain. The quarry covers an area of fifty acres and has a northern face which is 120 feet high. The company also operates a smaller quarry to the south which is 400 feet long, 150 feet w1de, and 45 feet high. In addition to the two quarries, the company owns

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

99

over 200 acres of exposed rock east of Rock Chapel Mountain.
According to Mr. Nelson Severinghaus, general manager and vice-president of the corporation, 1,000,000 tons of. crushed stone, 80,000 tons of washed sand and 50,000 tons of jetty stone were produced in 1949. The jetty stone ranges in size from rip rap (25 to 150 pounds) to large ten ton blocks. Additional stone, produced from quarries on the north side of Rock Chapel Mountain, amounted to 25,000 tons of rubble and 100,000 lineal feet of rough curbing in 1949. These latter quarries are leased and operated by the Kellogg Granite Company and the entire output is sold by the Consolidated Granite Corporation.
A pilot plant was set up in 1950 to produce poultry grit at a price of $0.40 per 80 pound sack. The prices of other products (F. 0. B. quarry) in 1950 were as follows:

r\'LEGEND PEGMI/717 ( OIK .SHOWING DIP

Z .STRIKE AN() J 0! P OF
8ANPIN$

10
f. S7"RikE. A-ND f' PLl/Ht;;E C1F
FLOW FOI.P A(~

10

'

PSli-/UfiNi:GEElfNoPp

M!C/1 /.ti{IJ4TI()N

-:::- ~-;
1-::.==:::~
/f II II
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NO. 1

Q UARRY1 ROCK CIIAPEL MOUNTAIN
Sc-'li.e
~-__J.,'o_o_ _4,_oo_ __,_o_o_ ____::_,Boo FEET

Fig. 41

100

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Rubble ______________________ $1.90 per ton
Rough curbing _________ $0.30 per lineal foot Crushed stone __________ $0.60 for undersize fines
$1.50 for Vs" to o/s" aggregate

Research is also being undertaken to find other by-product uses for the washed sand which is too fine for concrete aggregate. Among the uses which are being investigated (Severinghaus, 1950, pp. 82-84) are washed sand for concrete bricks, and feldspar for glass, pottery and enamels. The presence of approximately 4.5% potassium oxide (K20) and other rare elements may also serve as a supplement to fertilizer in agriculture. The latter use will depend on the solubility of gneiss in the very finely crushed state.
The rock is typical Lithonia gneiss with numerous disseminated garnet and magnetite crystals. The banding is widely variable in attitude (Fig. 41) due to its sheared and contorted nature. Two major sets of shear zones strike N10300E and N50-70W. The axes of flow folds (contortions) range in strike from N-S to N20E and plunge from 10 to 25N. Perhaps the most striking feature of the large quarry is the presence of numerous, northward dipping, white aplite dikes which can be seen on the east and west faces.
Smaller structural features in the rock include complex, ptygmatically folded quartz veins, garnet- and epidote-bearing bands, and a strong biotite orientation (lineation). Sheeting planes are common in the upper portion of the quarry.
The quarrying operation in the large number one quarry begins with the drilling of 61!2" holes in the north face with three churn drills. After the face is blasted down, the large blocks are drilled with jack hammers and re-blasted to make them small enough for loading by two 4 yard electric shovels. Six 12 yard side-dump trucks are used to haul the stone to the initial 60" by 48" Allis Chalmers jaw crusher.
The side-dump trailers (Figure 42), developed by Nelson Severinghaus in the late 1930's were awarded first prize in the Lincoln Arc Welding Foundation design competition (Automotive Trailer Division). The patent, sold to the Easton Car and Construction Company of Easton, Pennsylvania, features an open-sided box-type body which utilizes a hoist independent of the chasis at the dumping point. This independent

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

101

hoisting increases the life of the trailer by absorbing the total weight of the load.
The flow sheet of ~he number one quarry and main plant after leaving the initial jaw crusher is as follows:
42" 270 foot belt to storage

Jeffery Traylor feeder 42" 150 foot belt

Two 20" Allis Chalmers gyratory crushers

36" belt to revolving and vibrating screens

Oversize returned to two 4 foot Symons cone crushers.

Fig. 42. Side dump trucks used by the Consolidated Quarry Corporation.

102

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

The screens separate the stone into seven sizes ranging from one-eighth inch to 2 inches which are stored separately or blended. Part of the one-eighth inch size is sent to a hydraulic and screw classifier sand w:;tshing plant for the production of fine aggregate.
The flow sheet of the small number two quarry and plant begins with two wagon drills, three jack hammers, and a two yard P and H diesel shovel. From there it is as follows:
Two Euclid 10 yard trucks

42" x 10' pan feeder

30" x 42" Pioneer jaw crusher
t
30" belt
t
4' x 8' double deck vibrating screen.

Three sizes are screened in the number two plant: oversize, intermediate, and undersize. The oversize goes to a three-foot Traylor T. Y. gyratory crusher and the intermediate size goes to a three foot Symons cone crusher. All three products are mixed and taken to a storage pile by a 24 inch belt. A belt beneath the storage pile feeds the product to the 36 inch belt in the number one plant.

The capacity of the number one plant is 300 tons per hour

and that of the number two plant is 100 tons per hour. The

size of the operation has increased from an annual produc-

tion of 150,000 tons in the initial year of 1929 to well over

1,000,000 tons in 1950.

'

Cooper Quarry-Five acres of exposed Lithonia gneiss located east of the Lon Plunkett quarry and two and one-half miles south of Lithonia are owned by Mr. W. C. Cooper of Lithonia. A small quarry on the property was last worked in 1942 for rubble.

Davidson Granite Company-The Davidson Granite Company

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

103

of Lithonia owns and operates the Big Ledge and Pine Mountain (Little Stone Mountain) quarries, two of the largest in the area, and owns or leases a large portion of the exposed Lithonia gneiss in the vicinity of Lithonia. This includes the North Georgia quarries (70 acres), the north portion of Mile Rock and a portion of Collinsville Mountain.
The company is owned by N. A., J. K. Jr., and Charles Davidson of Lithonia and operates under the following corporate names:
The Stone Mountain Grit Company
The Davidson Brothers
The Davidson Granite Company
The Davidson Corporation
The Stone Mountain Grit Company produces crushed stone and poultry grit from the Big Ledge quarry, and the Davidson Corporation produces cut and dimension stone, street curbing, rubble and jetty stone from the Pine Mountain quarry.
The large crushing plant located at the Big Ledge quarry completely burned down in the late spring of 1950, and was replaced by a new, modern plant.
Manufacture of crushed stone and poultry grit begins with the drilling of the face of the Big Ledge quarry with two wagon drills, blasting, and breaking of the large blocks with steel balls dropped from derricks. The stone is loaded into Euclid trucks and taken to the initial 42 inch jaw crusher. From this point the stone follows the flow sheet shown below.
Compressed air to operate the pneumatic drills for the Pine Mountain quarry and to operate the pneumatic tools in the large 400-foot finishing shed is provided by compressors in a separate building located on the northwest side of the quarry. The finishing shed houses gang saws, diamond saws, pneumatic surfacers and finishers. A large overhead crane moves blocks of stone from one part of the building to another for surfacing, finishing or sawing. Some of the products of this plant include base courses, bulkheads, steps, copings, straight or circular curb stone and ashlar facings. Rip rap, curbing, jetty stone, rubble, paving blocks and monumental blocks are also manufactured from this quarry.

104

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

36" cone crusher
t
one to three smali cone crushers (stone should be dry at this point)
{I
screens and return conveyors (screens vary from 3" down to 40 mesh sand)

40-100 mesh sand bins

30-40% sand waste
/

series of temporary storage bins

1

portion returned to screens

permanent storage bins

y

~

crushed stone bins

bagging machines

The crushed stone used for poultry grit ranges from onefourth inch '(turkey size) to 40 mesh (canary size).

Production from the Big Ledge quarry (Stone Mountain Grit Company) in 1949 was 150,000 tons of crushed stone of which 100,000 tons was sold as poultry grit and the remaining 50,000 tons was sold as concrete aggregate. Ten thousand tons of cut or dimension stone, 25,000 tons of street curbing and 15,000 tons of combined rubble and jetty stone were produced from the Pine Mountain quarry.
The stone from both major quarries is a good quality, highly contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss. Numerous shear zones and aplite veins as well as larger discordant pegmatite dikes cut the banding. Garnet-rich, epidote-bearing bands

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

105

are numerous locally, especially in the Pine Mountain quarry. Black magnetite crystals are found throughout the gneiss.
The description of the individual quarries of the company, including detailed structural features, are given below.
Big Ledge Quarry-The Big Ledge quarry, occupying 135 acres, is located about one mile north of Lithonia. The property, which also includes the old Abram and Braswell properties, was formerly owned by the Southern Granite Company. The northern end of the quarry is presently being workeo for granite grit, concrete aggregate, road ballast and jetty stone. The south end is be~ng held in reserve for future use as building stone (Figure 43).
The rock is good quality gray-white Lithonia gneiss composed of quartz, microcline, oligoclase, biotite, and minor amounts of muscovite, epidote, magnetite, zircon and apatite. The banding is highly sheared, flow-folded and intruded by irregular biotite granite dikes, pegmatite dikes and aplite veins. The shear zones and flow fold axes trend approxi-

LEGEND

6~1 PEGIYIATJTE. i PIKE SHOWING PIP
1 APLITE Dtl(e .SHIJW!#G DIP

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1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ;/s:,,J.. ST/?CI(rU!fJ}J..

SOUTH PORTION OF B/6 LEI)GE. Qt//tli'R y

c.._ ~TI:EN{) UIIES

.SCA L.

roo

200

300

400

FET"

,.... 10

L.I1.J././~S(}

Fig. 43

106

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

mately N30E. Pink g-arnetiferous layers are occasionally seen.
Pine Mountain Quarry-The Pine Mountain quarry occupies the upper portion of Little Stone Mountain consisting of 380 acres of exposed Lithonia g-neiss (Plate 4). Two levels of ledges were being quarried at the time of the writer's visit in 1950; a lower level on the east, southwest and north slopes, and an upper level near the top of the mountain.
The rock is hig-hly contorted, medium-g-rained Lithonia biotite gneiss. It is very hard, g-ray-white stone suitable for general building and monumental purposes. The banding- is highly variable throughout, but shear zones and mica lineation are regular in trend. A major set of shear zones strike about N20E and a minor set trends northwesterly (Plate 4). The mica lineation plung-es northwest or southeast.
Slightly pink, garnet-rich, epidote-bearing layers parallel to the banding are common in the north and central portions of the quarry (Plate 5, figures 3, 4, 5 and 7). They are often intruded by pegmatite dikes and offset by small faults or shear zones. White aplite and quartz veins tightly infolded with the banding are shown in Plate 5, figures 1 and 6.
The future production from this quarry is almost unlimited due to the large size of the exposure and its easy accessibility. The company transports the stone from its quarry and finishing- shed to the main line of the Georgia Railroad by its own spur line railroad.
Arabia Mountain and Bradley Mountain Quarries-Arabia Mountain is a large knob of Lithonia g-neiss covering- an area of 205 acres, located two and one-half miles south of Lithonia. Bradley Mountain is located just southwest of Arabia Mountain.
Arabia Mountain was quarried extensively around 1900 for Belgian blocks, street curbing-, and building- stone. Quarry openings are located on the east, west and southwest sides of the peak.
The gneiss is high in mag-netite on the east side of Arabia Mountain where it also contains many small pegmatite pods with biotite-rich borders. Small discordant dikes of biotite granite cutting- across the banding- can be seen in several

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

107

quarry faces. The banding is highly deformed and sheared on the east side of the mountain. Two sets of shear zones trend N35E and N85E, respectively. Many of the shear zones are filled with aplite or pegmatite veins. Garnet- and epidote-bearing bands are found in several parts of the quarry.
None of the former production facilities for the operation remain except the old road bed for a spur line of the Georgia Railroad. However, quarrying could easily be resumed because of the many raised ledges on both mountains.
North Georgia Quarries-The North Georgia quarries are located about one mile west of Rock Chapel Mountain on the west side of Swift Creek. At least five separate quarry openings are located on the exposure covering an area of approximately seventy acres.
The rock is typical, highly contorted and sheared Lithonia biotite gneiss. The banding shows no regularity, but biotite flakes are strongly oriented in a northwest-southeast direction. Garnet and magnetite crystals are common.
In several quarries to the southwest of the main exposure, the rock is more highly pegmatized and intruded by homogeneous granite and aplite. In many places the banding grades gradually into a medium-grained, structureless, biotite granite.
This property provides an excellent reserve of good quality rock for use as building stone or aggregate. The quarries were formerly owned by Messrs. Watson and Brantley, and Mrs. Bowe of Lithonia. Under their ownership (Watson, 1902, p. 130) 150 carloads of rock were produced from February to August, 1898.
Davis Quarry-The western portion of Collinsville Mountain, located about two-thirds of a mile south of Little Stone Mountain and just north of Georgia Route 12, is owned by Mr. Will Davis of Lithonia. The property is now leased to the Davidson Brothers.
The rock is strongly contorted gray-white Lithonia gneiss composed of microcline, oligoclase, quartz and biotite with accessory amounts of magnetite, garnet, epidote, and zircon. Numerous shear zones range in strike from N5-25E and

108

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

biotite flakes are stretched in noHhwest-southeast direction. Axes of small flow folds (contortions) range in strike from N25-50E and plunge from 10-25N.
Several small garnet-rich layers like those in the Pine Mountain quarry can be seen in the surface of the exposure. Biotite-rich patches parallel to the banding are common. Scolecite, a radiating, fibrous, white zeolite occurs in joint surfaces in this quarry.

DeKalb County Quarry-The DeKalb County quarry is a moderately large opening in Lithonia gneiss located about two-thirds of a mile north of Little Stone Mountain and directly south of an unpaved county road. The property was formerly owned by Mr. J. W. Johnston but is now owned by the county. In 1950 it was leased to Mr. W. F. Beauford who supplied curb stone to the county.
The rock is typical Lithonia gneiss which is highly contorted and sheared. It is similar to that of Little Stone Mountain in the large number of garnet-rich bands parallel to the banding. Rather abundant aplite and pegmatite veins and dikes cut across the banding in a northeasterly direction. Figure 22 is a small map of the quarry showing the general structures of the rock and Plate 6 shows the structures in detail.

Elliot Quarries-A small quarry two and one-half miles northeast of Lithonia is owned by Mr. Coy Elliot. Several small openings are located in a pavement which covers an area of approximately five acres.

The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with random

orientation of banding and abundant shear zones trending

N30-40E. Magnetite crystals, white aplite veins and areas

of homogeneous biotite granite are common features of the

quarry. A small fault forming one face of the quarry is coated

with greenish damourite, muscovite, black tourmaline and a

brownish stain.



Gaines Quarry-The Gaines quarry, owned by Mr. M. A. Gaines of Gaines Lake, is located about one-half mile north of Georgia Route 12 on the west side of a dirt road running approximately along the DeKalb County-Rockdale County line. The largest of several openings is about three feet

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

109

high. The quarry has not been worked for at least twenty years.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with common magnetite crystals and rare pink garnets. Many small shear zones trend N25 E. The rock is medium-grained and evenly banded with quartz-feldspar bands about one-fourth inch wide.
Hammock Quarry-A small quarry owned by Mr. Harvey Hammock is located approximately one mile north of Little Stone Mountain and 400 yards north of the DeKalb County quarry. It was last quarried about 1943.
The opening is in medium- to coarse-grained, highly contorted Lithonia gneiss. Where consistent in trend, the banding ranges in strike from N35-60W and dips from l0N to vertical. Numerous shear zones in the quarry range in strike from N30-50E. Several garnet-epidote layers parallel to the banding are only a few inches wide. Black tourmaline occurs on the surfaces of small faults as tiny matted crystals.
Hayden Quarry-A small quarry in moderately contorted Lithonia gneiss located just north of Forest Lake is owned by the Hayden Estate and leased to Jeff Aycock for the production of rubble and cut stone. Locally, the rock is called Polecat stone.
The gneiss is gray-white, evenly banded and strongly sheared. The banding strikes approximately Nl0E and dips 20-35W. The axes of numerous small flow folds trend N5-35E and plunge 5-l5N. Shear zones filled with white aplite strike Nl 0E.
The composition of the rock in the quarry based on one sample is that of a quartz-monzonite (Table 1, no. L6) containing local concentrations of pyrite and red garnet and a moderate amount of magnetite. Aside from the pyrite and garnet areas the rock is of good quality suitable for general building purposes.
Haygood Quarry-A small quarry located about one-half mile northwest of Arabia Lake was formerly owned by Mr. W. 0. Smith and is now owned by Mr. M. J. Haygood.
The rock is medium- to coarse-grained, highly contorted

110

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Lithonia gneiss. Numerous small white aplite veins parallel to the banding are twisted into random orientations. Shear zones are abundant with a majority striking N30E and others striking in various directions between N-S and E-W. The quarry was last worked in 1939 for rubble.
Hutchens Quarry-The H. H. Hutchens property is located about 500 yards northeast of the Hayden quarry. It is a small opening in Lithonia gneiss now covered with black stain and lichens. It has been inactive since about 1900.
Johnson Quarry-A small abandoned quarry located about one mile northwest of Forest Lake is owned by J. C. Johnson of Lithonia. It was last operated around 1900 for stone for a building in Lithonia.
The rock is highly sheared Lithonia gneiss with many small aplite and pegmatite dikes in random orientation. The quarry is now covered with mosses and lichens, and the worked portion is stained gray or brown due to weathering.
Johnston Quarry-A large quarry located one-quarter of a mile northwest of Little Stone Mountain (Plate 4) is owned by Mr. Snell Johnston. The quarry was operated sporadically for curb stone and rubble during 1950.
The rock is gray, medium-grained and highly contorted Lithonia gneiss. In several parts of the exposure the stone contains numerous white, fine-grained aplite veins and coarsegrained pegmatite dikes. Thin quartz veins parallel to the banding are often intricately folded. Numerous shear zones trend in general about N20E. The axes of small flow folds are usually parallel to the strike of the shear zones, and a pronounced mica lineation trends in a northwest-southeast direction.
In the north central part of the quarry a garnet-rich epidote-bearing layer has been faulted and the fault filled with pegmatite (Plate 5, fig. 2). A large slickensided joint forms the southeast face of the opening.
The gneiss is good quality stone for general building purposes, and the exposure is large enough to be of coiJ.tinuing economic value. The upper surface has been worked to a depth of ten to twenty feet, and the central portion is being worked to still lower levels. In addition to the present quarry,

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

111

there is an almost unlimited supply of exposed stone to the southeast.
McClendon Quarries-A series of small quarries, just west of Georgia Route 124 and three-quarters of a mile northwest of Rock Chapel Mountain, are owned by H. 0. McClendon of Rock Chapel. The exposure covers an area of several acres on the south side of a small stream. The surface of the outcrop contains many large weathering pits like those described under the section on weathering in Part I.
The banding of the gneiss is highly variable in trend in the south portion of the exposure but becomes more consistent in strike as it approaches the contact with mica schist, located several hundred yards to the north. Near the contact, the banding strikes N70W and dips S0N. The gneiss contains many shear zones filled with white aplite.
McMayer Quarry-The McMayer quarry consists of several abandoned surface openings in highly contorted Lithonia gneiss located about 500 yards southwest of Collinsville Mountain. The rock was quarried to provide stone for the Broad Street Bridge in Atlanta.
Park Quarry-A small quarry owned by Mrs. Addie Park of Decatur is located approximately four and one-half miles southwest of Lithonia. The rock is faintly banded but well foliated gneiss similar to the Lithonia type. The foliation strikes generally N85E and dips S0N. Although not typical contorted Lithonia gneiss, it is slightly sheared and deformed. The shear zones trend N5W and the axes of small crenulations strike N20E and plunge 20N. Many dikes of Stone Mountain muscovite-rich granite and pegmatite cut across the rock, somewhat impairing its value as a building stone.
Plunkett Quarries-A large pavement exposure of Lithonia gneiss, located one-half mile southwest of Forest Lake, is owned by Mr. Lon Plunkett of Lithonia. Several small and large openings have been made in the rock, one of which was quarried as recently as 1950 for rubble.
The rock is contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss with many disseminated garnet and magnetite crystals. It is mediumto coarse-grained and locally has the appearance of porphyritic granite due to the presence of large feldspar crystals

112

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

within thin pegmatite veins. Abundant shear zones trend approximately N30E, and biotite lineation ranges in strike from N30-50W and plunges 10-15NW or SE. Several small faults located in the southwest corner of the largest quarry are filled with green damourite and radiating tourmaline crystals.
Powell Quarries-A 25 acre, slightly dome-shaped mass of Lithonia gneiss located south of Bradley and Arabia Mountain is owned by M. D. Powell of Klondike. One large and five small openings have been worked on various parts of the property. The present working is about 300 feet wide in an east-west direction and three to five feet high.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with many dikes and veins of white aplite filling northerly trending shear zones. In places where the banding is consistent, mainly on the south side of the exposure near the contact with mica schist, the banding strikes about N70W and ranges in dip from 60S to 60N. The number of shear zones and the amount of deformation of the banding also decrease rapidly as the contact is approached.
Garnet-rich, epidote-bearing bands are common in this exposure and are often faulted along the northeasterly trending shear zones. Large, black tourmaline crystals up to six inches long and more than one inch thick are found in some pegmatite dikes. Locally the tourmaline forms radiating clusters within the gneiss.
In 1950 the stone was quarried for rough curbing and rubble. Most of the curbing was used as coping in cemetery lots.
Reagin Quarries-Mr. Grover Reagin of Lithonia owns a large exposure of gneiss southwest of Little Stone Mountain and south of Tom George Creek. The property contains about twelve large quarry openings of which only one was being operated in 1950. Mr. Reagin also owns and periodically operates several small quarries on the south side of Collinsville Mountain, just north of Georgia Route 12. The production is almost entirely rubble.
The rock in both localities is typical contorted Lithonia gneiss containing disseminated garnet and magnetite crystals.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

113

Northeasterly trending shears are often filled with white aplite veins. Numerous joints are coated with colorless radiating scoledte.
Scales Quarries-Mrs. Lula Scales of Lithonia owns a portion of the exposure southwest of Little Stone Mountain on which the Reagin quarries are located. The rock is the same as that of the Reagin property. No quarrying has been done for many years.
Smith Quarries-Several quarry openings located three- quarters of a mile north of Arabia Lake and near the Haygood quarry are owned by Mr. W. C. Smith of Lithonia. Most of the production from the quarries was used locally for chimney stones, foundation stones and steps.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss with many flow folds and shear zones. Folded, lens-shaped, biotite-rich inclusions are common in this locality.
Near the northern contact with mica schist, located a few hundred yards north of the quarries, the banding of the gneiss becomes more consistent in attitude, ranging in strike from N40-70W and ranging in dip from 15-35N. The quarry was last worked in 1940 by Mr. Smith for rubble.
Turner Quarry-A large amount of stone has been removed from the Henry Turner quarry, located two miles east southeast of Lithonia and immediately north of the Georgia Railroad tracks. The quarry was previously owned jointly by Mrs. Mary Reagin and the Georgia Railroad.
The rock is typical contorted Lithonia gneiss, the same as that of Collinsville Mountain just to the west.
Wilson Quarry-The Archie Wilson quarry is a small opening on the west side of the Lithonia-Stone Mountain Highway, one mile north of Lithonia. It is 250 feet long, 150 feet wide and 20 feet deep.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with numerous small pegmatite dikes and veins rich in muscovite. Magnetite is sparsely scattered throughout the gneiss but is concentrated in small aplite veins. These aplite veins commonly fill northeasterly trending shear zones. The banding of the gneiss is highly variable due to the shearing.

114

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Part of the eastern wall of the quarry is bounded by a fault which trends N10E and dips 75W. Slickensides on the fault surface strike N20 9 W and plunge 30N.

Gwinnett County
Britt Quarry-A small quarry opening, located one and onehalf miles south of Snellville and a short distance east of Georgia Route 124, is owned by Mr. W. C. Britt.
The rock is slightly contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss intruded by numerous dikes of Stone Mountain granite and garnetiferous pegmatites. Small garnet and magnetite crystals are common. A pronounced banding ranges in strike from N30 to 70E and dips steeply to the west. A faint additional foliation consists of an orientation of biotite flakes at an angle to the banding. This secondary structure dips gently to the west.
The rock was quarried only to a small extent because of the restricted area of exposure and the abundance of crosscutting dikes of pegmatite and granite.
Byrd Quarry-A small quarry owned by Mr. G. T. Byrd is located two and one-half miles north of Loganville on a branch of Bay Creek. The rock is strongly banded, non-contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss with small disseminated magnetite crystals. The stone was used to build the Loganville Methodist Church.
Gwinnett County Quarry-The Gwinnett County quarry is located approximately three miles east of Snellville on the south side of U. S. Highway 78. The opening is about 250 feet long in a north-south direction and 50 feet high.
The rock is light gray, well-banded Lithonia gneiss. Numerous small pink garnets are disseminated throughout the rock but are slightly more concentrated in biotite bands. The banding is consistent in trend varying in strike from N-S to N20W and ranging in dip from 10 to 20E. Locally, the banding is tightly deformed into zig-zag recumbent isoclinal folds. Small pegmatite and quartz veins parallel the banding, but larger biotite granite sills grade almost imperceptibly into the gneiss.
The rock was formerly quarried ,.for road ballast and ag-

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

115

gregate but the quarry has not been in operation for several years.
Hayes Quarry-The J. W. Hayes quarry, located about three and one-half miles southeast of Lawrenceville, was formerly known as the Turner quarry. About two acres of exposed pavement contain several small workings which were being quarried for rubble at the time of the writer's visit in 1950.
The pavement is composed of strongly foliated gneiss which resembles the Lithonia type except for a high content of muscovite. The rock apparently weathers rapidly inasmuch as the sap cover is two feet thick in places. It is relatively brittle and breaks easily with several blows of the hammer.
Johnson Property-Several small openings have been made in a large pavement on the E. A. Johnson property located east of Georgia Route 124, about one and one-half miles southsouthwest of Snellville.
The rock is essentially non-contorted, strongly banded Lithonia gneiss. It has a higher percentage of muscovite than the typical Lithonia gneiss and is much less contorted and sheared. Small magnetite and garnet crystals are scattered throughout, and light green epidote grains occur locally. Numerous Stone Mountain granite dikes cut the gneiss.
The banding has a consistent strike of N25E and a vertical dip. Clusters of biotite form a pronounced lineation parallel to the strike of the banding.
The stone is good quality for building purposes except for those areas with a high percentage of granite intrusions. The rock was formerly used for local construction.
Johnston Quarries-A large dome-shaped mass of Lithonia gneiss covering an area of more than 10 acres is owned by Snell Johnston. It is located on the east slope of No Business Creek one and three-quarters of a mile south of Snellville.
The banding of the gneiss is generally highly contorted but is locally non-deformed. Hand specimens of the rock show that it is typical Lithonia gneiss with scattered garnet and magnetite crystals. Locally the muscovite content is increased where large dikes of Stone Mountain granite cut the rock.
About six or seven small openings have been worked on

116

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

the property, but the largest has a face only about four feet high. The large size of the outcrop and the good quality of the stone make the rock suitable for many purposes. However, the quarries in this vicinity are at a disadvantage because of their greater distance from the market than the quarries of Stone Mountain and Lithonia.
Jones Quarry-The C. V. Jones quarry is located one mile west of the center of Lawrenceville just south of Georgia Route 120. Formerly it was owned by Gwinnett County and prior to that it was known as the Lawrenceville quarry. It is several hundred feet wide and about 50 feet high. It is now filled with water.
The stone is non-contorted but strongly lineated Lithoniatype biotite gneiss. Biotite and a small amount of muscovite are streaked into a pronounced lineation which strikes S40E and plunges 10S.
The quarry has not been worked since about 1925 when crushed stone and road ballast were produced.
Kelley Quarry-Mr. Hoke 0. Kelley of Atlanta owns a small quarry in a pavement exposure on the west side of Bay Creek, three miles north of Loganville. It was formerly known as the McElvany Shoals quarry. The rock was used to build a stone house and stone wall near the quarry.
The rock is strongly banded, non-contorted Lithonia biotite gneiss. The banding strikes N10E and dips 15E. Small biotite-bearing pegmatites strike N45W and locally deform the banding.
McCart Quarry-The McCart quarry is a very small opening in Lithonia gneiss located on the west side of Georgia Route 124, one and one-half miles north northeast of Centerville.
A pronounced banding in the rock has a fairly consistent trend which ranges in strike from N-S to N30E and dips 20E. A lineation formed by orientation of biotite clusters plunges gently to the north. Several pegmatite and granite dikes cut across the banding.
McConnell Quarry-A small quarry located one-half mile northwest of the center of Grayson on the west side of Georgia Route 20 is owned by Mr. J. N. McConnell of Grayson.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

117

It was owned and operated prior to 1900 by G. W. Cates who quarried the rock for a railroad trestle.
The rock is an augen gneiss with quartz and feldspar bands drawn into lenticles. The banding strikes N40E and dips about l5W. It is a non-contorted phase of the Lithonia gneiss. A portion of the exposure consists of a biotite granite intrusion which contains garnet and epidote.

Moon Quarries-Several small quarry openings on the Raymond Moon property are located south of U. S. Route 78, a mile and three-quarters east of Snellville.
The rock is Lithonia gneiss with a strong, slightly undulatory banding. It is medium-grained and contains small magnetite crystals and rare ~arnet crystals. Several small granite and pegmatite dikes trend N50W.
The quarry was last worked many years ago for building stone for the Snellville school. The surface is now covered with mosses and lichens.

Sawyer Quarry-The J. C. Sawyer quarry is located about

three-quarters of a mile northwest of the center of Snellville.

The small opening is in medium-grained, strongly banded

Lithonia biotite gneiss composed of oligoclase, microcline,

quartz, biotite, muscovite and small pink garnets. The band-

ing is slightly deformed with small flow folds whose axes

strike Nl0E and plunge l0N. Numerous pegmatite veins

cut the gneiss. -

-

Woodruff Quarry--Mr. Hoke Woodruff owns a small quarry in a flat rock exposure of Lithonia gneiss, located about onequarter of a mile north of U.S. Route 78, approximately three miles northwest of Loganville. The property was formerly owned by Mr. T. Langley.
The rock is highly contorted with many flow folds and shear zones. The rock contains scattered grains of magnetite, pink garnets and green epidote.

Yancy Quarry-A small quarry opening with a ledge about one foot high is located one mile northeast of Grayson on the G. J. Yancy property. The stone is slightly sheared and crenulated Lithonia gneiss containing numerous disseminated magnetite crystals.

118

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

Rockdale County
Almond Quarry-The Almond quarry is a small opening just west of Tan Yard Branch at the southwest edge of Conyers. It is owned by Mr. Thomas Parker.
The rock is typical contorted and sheared Lithonia gneiss with a badly iron-stained surface. Pink garnets and magnetite crystals are common in the gneiss, and large tourmaline clusters are found in quartz veins. The grain of the rock, shown by a six foot quarry face, trends approximately N-S.
Beadie Property-Several small openings have been made in a pavement of Lithonia gneiss which crops out on both sides of a county road three miles west northwest of Conyers. The property is now owned by Mr. B. Owens of Conyers. The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with many disseminated magnetite crystals.
Brooks Quarries-The Brooks quarry consists of several openings in a three acre pavement of Lithonia gneiss about two and one-half miles north northwest of Conyers on the south bank of Yellow River. Prior to 1900, it was known as the Pierce quarry but is now owned by Mr. Cotton of Conyers. The stone was last worked about 1895. The rock is similar to that of the Beadie quarry above.
Calloway Quarry-A small quarry on the northwest side of Milstead is owned by the Calloway Mills Company. It is located on the south side of Yellow River, several hundred yards east of the river bridge.
The rock is a slightly contorted phase of the Lithonia gneiss with only occasional flow folds and shear zones. Its structure is hard to detect because of the dark gray or brown weathered surface, but the banding seems to strike N40W and dip 40E. Several small pegmatite dikes about six inches wide range in strike from N50 to 80E.
Farmer Quarry-The Edward Farmer quarry is located six miles north of Conyers, just south of a highway near the county line. The rock is mildly contorted Lithonia gneiss, containing many small white aplite veins which trend N25E and dip 25 E. Small magnetite grains are disseminated in the gneiss and larger magnetite crystals are found in the aplite veins. Small irregular pegmatite dikes are common.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

119

Johnston Quarry-The Will Johnston quarry, leased by the Haygood Brothers of Lithonia, is located about one mile northwest of Zingara. The pavement exposure contains about ten acres of good quality contorted Lithonia gneiss. The rock is medium-grained but contains occasional microcline porphyroblasts up to two inches in diameter. The biotite is somewhat altered to chlorite. Small pink garnets and magnetite crystals are scattered throughout the rock.
The stone was being quarried for curbing and rubble at the time of the writer's visit in 1950.
Mahoney Quarry-The C. M. Mahoney quarry, located one mile northeast of Milstead, contains about ten acres of exposed Lithonia gneiss. The quarry consists of two small ledges.
The rock is highly contorted and sheared and contains large feldspar crystals which have been elongated into augen. Small aplite and pegmatite dikes commonly cut across the erratic banding. Small oxidized magnetite crystals have stained the surface a yellow-brown.
The quarry was last worked for curb stone about 1900 by Lee Brantley.
Norton Quarry-A large quarry located one mile northwest of Milstead on the west side of Georgia Route 20 is presently owned by Mr. J. E. Norton. During the period between 1900 and 1915, it was operated by Lee Brantley for Belgian blocks and for curb stone used in St. Louis, Missouri. It has been idle since that time.
The rock is highly folded Lithonia gneiss containing scattered magnetite crystals. A strong banding is cut by numerous shear zones which trend N40W. The grain of the stone trends N70W.
Pirkle Quarry-The Pirkle quarry is a small opening on the west side of a large pavement of Lithonia gneiss located about one-half mile south of the village of Zingara. The property is owned by Emma Chandler.
The gneiss is medium-grained and well banded with quartz-feldspar layers up to one-quarter of an inch wide. The banding is non-contorted and consistent in strike. Scat-

120

STONE MOqNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

tered magnetite crystals and epidote grains are common. Occasional shear zones trend N30E. One small dike of Stone Mountain muscovite granite was seen in the exposure.
Reagin Quarry-A small quarry owned by W. B. Reagin is located one mile north of Milstead. It was worked about 1900 for rubble, chimney stone and foundation stone. The quarried portion is now covered by mosses and lichens.
The rock is a highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with small magnetite grains scattered throughout. Two pronounced sets of shear zones trend N60W and N80W, respectively.
Rockdale County Quarry-The Rockdale County quarry is a large opening in Lithonia gneiss located on the east side of Georgia Route 20, one mile north of Milstead. The quarry was operated on a large scale about 1900 by Lee Brantley of Lithonia. The production at that time was primarily curb stone. and Belgian blocks for street paving. Presently the quarry is operated by Rockdale County to supply crushed stone for road ballast and concrete aggregate.
The rock is highly sheared and contorted Lithonia gneiss with many small aplite and pegmatite dike intrusions. Locally the surface is badly iron-stained by decomposition of pyrite contained in the rock.
Shaw Quarry-Mr. Park Shaw of Stone Mountain owns a rather large quarry lo.cated two miles north of Conyers. The quarry, with a face about fifteen feet high, was extensively worked about 1900, but has been idle since that time. A small building and a broken dam are the only remains of the former operation.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss with random banding.
Sims Quarry-A small quarry located two and one-half miles northwest of Conyers is owned by Carl Sims and operated by E. C. Reagin. The present operation started about May, 1950, but was previously operated about 1900. Mr. Reagin employed two men and used an air compressor to quarry building stone at the time of the writer's visit in 1950.
The rock is typical light gray Lithonia gneiss which is highly contorted and sheared. The banding is erratic.

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

121

Whittaker Quarry-Mr. Robert Williams owns a small quarry, formerly known as the Whittaker quarry, in a one acre pavement, located one-half mile south of Conyers on the west side of Georgia Route 138. The quarry has been idle long enough to permit a growth of mosses and lichens on the surface. A yellow-stained sap cover extends about four inches down to the fresh rock.
The stone is highly sheared and .contorted Lithonia gneiss with small disseminated magnetite crystals. A prominent set of joints with slickensided surfaces trends N50E and dips 65NW.

Walton County
Carter Quarry-A small quarry owned by Lee Carter and formerly owned by Steven Brand is located on Flat Rock Creek in Loganville. The exposure is composed of well banded, medium-grained Lithonia gneiss. The opening is now covered with lichens and stain.
Cown Quarry-The Horace Cown quarry is located on the east side of Loganville, just south of U. S. Route 78. The stone is locally contorted Lithonia gneiss with a slight augen structure. It is medium- to coarse-grained and contains numerous magnetite octahedra. The rock was used to build a structure on the property which is now abandoned.
Forrester Quarry-A small surface opening has been made in a large pavement of Lithonia gneiss just south of the junction of two county roads, approximately six miles southwest of Loganville. The opening is one-half mile west of Sandy Rock Creek.
The rock is highly contorted Lithonia augen gneiss with several percent magnetite. Quarrying was done to provide local building stone.
Guthrie Quarry-A small quarry located a short distance west of Little Haynes Creek, and five miles south of Loganville, is owned by Mr. T. L. Guthrie. The rock, highly contorted Lithonia gneiss, was quarried for local use about forty years ago.
McCuller Quarry-Mr. Ewell McCuller owns a small quarry located four and one-half miles south of Loganville. The stone

122

STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

is highly contorted Lithonia gneiss which has been intimately intruded by coarse-grained homogeneous muscovite-biotite granite (Stone Mountain type). Magnetite crystals are rare and no garnets were observed. The biotite is partly chloritized.
The exposure in which the quarry is located is small and the rock is not of good quality. The stone has not been worked for many years.
Rockmore Quarry-The M. L. Rockmore quarry is located just south of U. S. Route 78 in the village of Loganville. The flat rock exposure covers an area of approximately five acres. The stone was quarried to build the Methodist Church of Loganville, plus several other .local structures.
The rock is locally contorted, well-banded Lithonia gneiss with a pronounced augen structure in the coarse-grained portions. Small cross-cutting pegmatite dikes are common in this quarry.
Windsor Bridge Quarry-A small quarry located on the west bank of Alcovy River, five miles northeast of Loganville, is owned by Mr. Dennis Still. The rock is non-contorted Lithonia gneiss with a pronounced augen structure. The stone taken from the opening was used to build the bridge across the Alcovy River.
Yancy Quarry-A small quarry near the northwest limits of Loganville, just north of Georgia Route 20, is owned by Mr. T. D. Yancy. The rock is evenly banded, medium-grained Lithonia-type gneiss. The banding strikes N15W and dips 25E. A pronounced mica lineation strikes N10W and plunges several degrees north.
The rock was quarried many years ago to build a dam across a small stream which runs across the north siG.e of the exposure. The property was formerly known as the Braswell quarry.

GLOSSARY*
ALLOTRIOMORPHIC-Minerals of an igneous rock which show no crystal faces.
ALLUVIUM-River deposited sands.
AMPHIBOLITE-A metamorphic rock consisting essentially of amphibole (usually hornblende) and plagioclase with accessory amounts of epidote, pyroxene, quartz, titanite, etc.
AMPHIBOLITE FACIES-The metamorphic grade in which rocks of appropriate chemical composition contain hornblende and anorthite-bearing plagioclase.
ANTICLINE-An up-arched fold.
ANTITHETIC SHEAR-Shear or fault which forms at a high angle to the relative direction of movement.
APLITE-Light-colored (usually white), sugary-grained igneous vein or dike rock composed essentially of feldspar and quartz.
ARGILLACEOUS-An adjective applied to rocks containing clay.
ATTENUATED-Thinned or tapered.
AUGEN-Eye-shaped mineral grains or aggregates found in some gneisses.
AUTOLITH-A fragment of igneous rock incorporated in an igneous rock of later formation, both of which are considered to be formed from the same parent magma.
BANDING-Alternation of layers of differing mineral composition or texture or both.
BIAXIAL-Containing two optic axes.
BIPYRAMID-A double-ended pyramid.
CHLORITIZATION-Alteration of dark silicates (micas, hornblendes, pyroxenes, etc.) to chlorite.
COLLUVIUM-Heterogeneous rock detritus transported by the action of gravity.
CONFORMABLE-Parallel arrangement of strata or banding.
CONGLOMERATE-Rock composed of rounded pebbles of other rock, cemented together.
CONTORTED-Intricately twisted or folded.
CROSS JOINTS-Joints or breaks which are nearly perpendicular to some linear structure such as a fold axis.
DENDRITIC-Branching as the limbs of a tree.
DIABASE-A dark green to black dike-forming igneous rock mainly composed of randomly oriented plagioclase laths in a matrix of augite. In the Stone Mountain district the rock is fine-grained.
DISCORDANT-Adjective used to describe an igneous intrusion which cuts across bedding or schistosity planes.
*Many of the definitions are adapted from Rice, C. M., Dictionary of Geological Terms, Edwards Bros., Ann Arbor, Mich., 1948.
123

DISPERSION-The separation of complex light into its different colored rays, as by a prism.
DRAG FOLDS-Minor folds produced by movement of strata past one another during folding.
ELLIPSOID-A surface whose plane sections are all ellipses or circles.
EQUIGRANULAR-Minerals in a rock which are all of essentially the same size.
EUHEDRAL-Textural term applied to minerals with well developed crystal faces.
FABRIC-The shape and arrangement of the constituents of a rock.
FISSURE-An extensive crack or break in rock.
FLOWAGE FOLIATION-A planar structure produced by the subparallel orientation of minerals or groups of minerals by flowage.
FLOW FOLDS-Small folds produced by deformation of a plastic or semi-plastic material.
-. FOLD AXIS-The invisible line about which starta are bent to form a fold.
FOLIATION-Segregation of particular minerals of a rock into lenses, streaks or individual bands.
GARNETIFEROUS-Containing garnets.
GNEISS-A metamorphic rock with a pronounced banded structure.
GRAIN-A quarrying term meaning the second easiest direction of splitting of a rock.
GRANITE-A medium- to coarse-grained igneous rock composed of potash feldspar, quartz and lesser amount of sadie plagioclase, biotite, muscovite or other dark silicate. In this report the term granite is also applied to igneous rocks of quartz-monzonite composition.
GRANITIZATION-The conversion of solid rocks to rocks of granitic character without passing through a magmatic stage.
GRANOBLASTIC-Sugary-grained (metamorphic texture).
GROUNDMASS-Relatively fine, crystalline portions of a rock contrasted with larger grains such as phenocrysts or porphyroblasts.
IDIOMORPHIC-Mineral grains showing their own crystal faces. Similar to euhedral.
IGNEOUS-Solidification from the molten state.
INCIPIENT-Beginning to show itself.
INDEX MINERAL-A mineral which must be present in metamorphic rocks of certain composition to satisfy the prevailing pressure-temperature conditions.
INDEX OF REFRACTION-A number expressing the ratio of the sine of the angle of incidence: sine of the angle of refraction.
INTERSTRATIFIED-Alternating strata. ISOCLINAL-A fold whose limbs are parallel. JOINT-A crack separating two parts of a once continuous block. KAOLIN-A white, or slightly stained, clay mineral formed by the de-
composition of feldspars.
124

KYANITE ZONE-Metamorphic zone in which kyanite is the index mineral.
LACCOLITE-Same as laccolith. An igneous rock which spreads out laterally between strata like a huge lens.
LENGTH FAST-Long direction of a mineral parallel to the smaller index of refraction of the mineral.
LENGTH SLOW-Long direction of a mineral parallel to the larger index of refraction of the mineral.
LINEATION-Any linear element in a rock such as an elongate mineral, fold axis, etc.
LONGITUDINAL FOLDS-Folds parallel to the major axis of uplift or folding.
MANTLE-Residual cover or weathered rock over unweathered bedrock.
MARBLE-Coarse-grained, recrystallized limestone.
MATRIX-Same as groundmass.
MEGASCOPIC-Seen with the naked eye.
MELADIORITE-Rock with a greater abundance of dark constituents than a normal diorite.
METAMORPHIC FACIES-A rock which has reached certain temperature and pressure conditions will develop a distinct set of minerals dependent upon the chemical composition of the rock.
METAMORPHIC GRADE-Similar to metamorphic facies.
METAMORPHIC ROCKS-Igneous and sedimentary rocks which have been recrystallized by temperature and pressure.
METASOMATISM-Replacement.
MICA FLUCTUATION-Orientation of mica flakes about an axis.
MIGMATITE-Mixed rock composed of an older schist or gneiss with numerous granite or aplite veins parallel to the foliation.
MONADNOCK-Unweathered prominence which rises above the surrounding plain.
OCHRE-Mixture of brown and red iron oxides.
OROGENY-Process of mountain building.
OX BOW LAKE-A crescent-shaped lake formed in an abandoned river bend.
PARAGENESIS-Sequence of formation of minerals in a rock.
PAVEMENT-Nearly flat, unweathered rock mass supporting little or no vegetation.
PEGMATITE-Coarse-grained dike rock composed of potash feldspar, quartz, mica and minor amounts of soda feldspar.
PENEPLAIN-A land surface of slight relief worn down by erosion almost to a plain.
PETROFABRICS-Internal structure of rocks in relation to the movements involved in their formation.
PETROGRAPHY-Systematic field and microscopic description of rocks.
125

PHENOCRYST-Individual crystal imbedded in a finer-grained groundmass of an igneous rock.
PLANIMETRIC MAP-Map without topographic contours.
PLEOCHROIC-Exhibiting several different colors when looked through in different directions.
PLICATION-A fold.
PLUTON-Irregularly-shaped igneous intrusion.
POIKILITIC-Small grains or crystals enclosed in larger grains of an igneous rock.
POIKILOBLASTIC-Small grains enclosed in larger grains of a metamorphic rock.
POLYHEDRAL-Having many sides.
POLYSYNTHETIC TWINNING-Repeated twinning in which the crystal is made up of thin lamellae alternately in reversed position.
PORPHYRITIC-Igneous rock texture in which larger grains or crystals are enclosed in a finer-grained groundmass.
PORPHYROBLAST-Large crystal which has grown in a rock by metamorphic processes.
PORPHYROBLASTIC-Texture due to the presence of porphyroblasts.
PRISM-An open form of similar faces parallel to the vertical crystallographic axis.
PTYGMATIC-Complexly folded vein or band.
QUARTZ-MONZONITE-A medium- to coarse-grained igneous rock composed of almost equal amounts of potash and soda feldspar, quartz, and lesser amounts of biotite, muscovite, hornblende and other accessory minerals.
QUARTZITE-Recrystallized sandstone composed mainly of quartz.
RELIC-Remnant of an original rock preserved in a rock that has been recrystallized by metamorphism.
REPLACEMENT-The process by which one mineral or chemical substance takes the place of an earlier substance.
RIFT-Easiest direction of splitting of a rock. Usually parallel to the surface.
ROSETTE-Radiating as the petals of a flower.
ROSIWAL ANALYSIS-A statistical method of determining the volume percentages of the minerals of a rock.
"SAP"-Partly weathered upper few inches of pavements of granite or gneiss.
SAPROLITE-Weathered rock which retains its original structures.
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS-Rocks formed by the hardening of sediments deposited by water, wind, or glaciers.
SCHIST-Foliated metamorphic rock whose individual folia are mineralogically alike.
SCHISTOSITY-The property by which a foliated rock can be divided into thin flakes.
126

SERIATE-Inequigranular texture of an igneous rock.

SERICITIZED-Replacement of alumino-silicate minerals by sericite.

SERRATE-"Saw-toothed" texture.

SHEAR ZONES-Small shears or faults which may be filled with quartz, aplite or pegmatite veins.

SHEETING-Splitting of rock parallel to the surface.

SILLIMANITE ZONE-Metamorphic zone in which sillimanite is the index mineral.

SPALLING-Breaking off of ~hips or fragments of rock.

S-SURFACES-Any planar structures of a rock.

STAUROLITE ZONE-Metamorphic zone in which staurolite is the index mineral.

STRIATED-Covered with parallel scratches or grooves.

SUTURED-Irregular, interlocking contacts.

SYMPLECTITIC-Secondary intergrowth or interfingering of two min-

erals.



SYNCLINE-A structural trough.

SYNTECTONIC-Formed during deformation.

SYNTHETIC SHEAR-Shear or fault which forms at a low angle to the relative direction of movement.

TRANSVERSE FOLDS-Folds whose axes trend at approximately right angles to the major fold axes of a region.

TWINNING-An assemblage of two or more crystals, or parts of crystals, in reversed position with reference to one another in accordance with some twin law.

UNIVERSAL STAGE-Instrument used to orient a thin section in any desired position under a microscope.

XENOBLASTIC-Metamorphic minerals without crystal faces.

XENOLITH-An inclusion.

127

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND SYMBOLS
An1s -- - The term "An" with its subscript indicates the percentage of anorthite molecule contained in plagioclase. An1s would contain 85% albite and 15% anorthite.
Na - - - - Smallest index of refraction of a biaxial mineral. Nf3---- Intermediate index of refraction of a biaxial mineral. Nr - - - - Largest index of refraction of a biaxial mineral. Ne - - - - Index of refraction of the extraordinary ray in a uni-
axial mineral. No - - - - Index of refraction of the ordinary ray in a uniaxial
mineral. 2V - - - - The true angle between optic axes of a biaxial mineral. Z 1\ c - - The angle between Z and c. Z is the vibration direction
of the slowest ray or largest index of refraction of a biaxial mineral. C is the vertical crystal axis.
> r v - - The 2V in red light is greater than the 2V in violet
light. X> Y, X< Y-- Absorption greater (or less) in the X direction than in the Y direction.
128

REFERENCES
ADAMS, F. D., and BARLOW, A. E., Geology of the Halliburton and Bancroft Areas, Ontario: Canada Department of Mines, Memoir no. 6, 1910.
BALK, ROBERT, Stnwtural Geology of the Adirondack Anorthosite: Min. U. Pet. Mitt., Bd. 41, 1931, pp. 308-434.
- - - - - - , St~uctural and Petrologic Studies in Dutchess County, New York, Pt. 1: Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., vol. 47, pp. 685-774, 1936.
- - - - - - , Structu~al Behavior of Igneous Rocks: Geol. Soc. Am., Memoir 5, 177 pp., 1937.
BARROW, G., On the Intrusion of M~~scovite-Biotite Gne;,ss in the southeast Highlands of Scotland: Geol. Soc. London. Quart. Jour., vol. 49, pp. 330-358, 1893.
BECKER, G. F., Gold Fields of the Southern Appalachians: 16th Ann. Rept., Pt. 3, U. S. Geol. Sur., pp. 289-293, 1894-1895.
CLOOS, ERNST, Der Sierra Nevada Pluton in Californien: Neues Jahrb. Beil., Bd. 76, Abt. B., pp. 355-450, 1936.
------, Lineation, A Critical Review and Annotated Bibliography: Geol. Soc. Am. Memoir 18, 122 pp., 1946.
- - - - - - , Oolite Deformation in the South Mountain Fold, Maryland: Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., Vol. 58, pp. 843-918, 1947.
CRICKMAY, G. W., Geology of the Crystalline Rocks, Geologic Map of Ga.: Ga. Dept. of Mines, 1939.
DALY, R. A., Igneous Rocks and Their Origin: McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York, 563 pp., 1914.
DARTON, N. H., and KEITH, ARTHUR, Washington Folio: U. S. Geol. Survey, 1901.
EMMONS, R. C., The Universal Stage: Geol. Soc. Am. Memoir 8, 205 pp., 1943.
ESKOLA, PENTTI, The Mineral Facies of Rocks: Norsk. Geol. Tid., vol. 6, pp. 143-194, 1920.
- - - - - - , O n the Differential Anatexis of Rocks: Bull. Comm. geol. de Finlande, no. 103, pp. 12-25, 1933.
FAIRBAIRN, H. W., Struct~~ral Petrology of Deformed Rocks: AddisonWesley Press Inc., Cambridge, Mass., 344 pp., 1949.
Geologic Map of Georgia: Georgia Division of Mines, Mining and Geology. Scale 1:500,000, 1939.
HALLIMOND, A. F., On the Graphical Representation of the Calciferous Amphiboles: Am. Min., vol. 28, pp. 65-89, 1943.
HATCH, F. H., WELLS, A. K., WELLS, M. K., The Petrology of the Igneous Rocks: Thomas Murby and Co., London, 469 pp., 1949.
HESS, H. H., Chemical Composition and Optical Properties of Common Clinopyroxenes, Pt. 1: Am. Min., vol. 34, pp. 621-666, 1949.
HILLS, E. S., Outlines of Struct~~ral Geology: Methuen and Co. Ltd., London. 172 pp., 1943.
129

JOHANNSEN, ALBERT, Descriptive Petrography of the Igneous Rocks, Vol. 1, Univ. of Chicago Press, 318 pp., 1939.
JONAS, A. I., Structure of the Metamorphic Belt of the So~tthmn Appalachians: Am. Jour. Sci., 5 ser., vol. 24, pp. 228-243, 1932.
KENNEbY, G. C., Charts fo1 the Correlation of Optical Properties with Chemical Composition of some Common Rock-forming Minerals: Am. Min., vol. 32, pp. 561-573, 1947.
KESLER, T. L., Correlation of some Metam01phic Rocks in the Central .Carolina Piedmont: Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., vol. 55, pp. 755-782, 1944.
KUENEN, Ph., Observations and Experiments on Ptygmatic Folding: Bull. Comm. geol. de Finlande, no. 123, pp. 11-28, 1938.
KVALE, ANDERS, Pet1ologic and Structural Studies in the Bergsdalen Quadrangle, Western Norway. Pt. 2. Structu1al Geology: Bergens Museums Arbok, 1946 og 1947, 255 pp., 1948.
LA FORGE, LAURENCE, and PHALEN, W. C., Description of the Ellijay Quadrangle, Ga.-N. C.-Tenn.: Ellijay folio, U. S. Geol. Sur. fol. 187. 18 pp., 1913.
- - - - - - , Physical Geog1aphy of Georgia. The Central Upland: Geol. Sur. of Ga., Bull. 42, pp. 57-92, 1925.
LARSEN, E. S., and BERMAN, HARRY, Mic1oscopic Determination of the Nonopaque Minemls, 2nd Ed.: 1]". S. Geol. Sur. Bull. 848.
LESTER, J. G., The Geology of the Region around Stone Mountain, Georgia: PhD. thesis, University of Colorado, 1938.
------,. Garnet Seg1egations In Granite Gneiss of DeKalb County, Georgia: Jour. Geol., vol. 47, pp. 841-847, 1939.
- - - - - - , . and ALLEN, A. T., Diabase of the Ge01gia Piedmont: Bull. Geol. Soc. Am., vol. 61, pp. 1217-1224, 1950.
PURINGTON, C. W., Geologic and. Topographic Features of the Region about Atlanta, Ge01gia: Am. Geol., vol. 14, pp. 106-108, 1894.
READ, H. H., The Geology of Central Suthe1land: Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Scotland, explanation of sheets 108 and 109. 238 pp., 1931.
- - - - - - , . Granites and Granites: Geol. Soc. Am. memoir 28 (The origin of g-ranite, James Gilluly, Chairman), pp. 1-19, 1948.
SEDERHOLM, J. J., Om Granit och Gneis: Bull. Comm. geol. de Finlande, no. 23, 1907.
------, On Synantectic Minerals and Related Phenomena: Bull. Comm. geol. de Finlande, no. 48, 143 pp., 1916.
- - - - - - , On the Migmatites and Associated P1e-Cambrian Rocks of Southweste1n Finland, Pt. 2: Bull. Comm. geol. de Finlande, no. 77, 1926.
SEVERINGHAUS, NELSON, Problems in the Quar1ying of Lithonia Georgia Granite: Geoi. Sur. Ga., Bull. 56, pp. 80-85, 1950.
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SUNDIUS, N., The Classification of the Ho1nblendes and the Solid Solution Relations of the Amphibole G1oup: Sver. Geol. Undersok., ser. C, Arsbok 40, no. 480, 1946.
130

TSUBOI, S., A Dispersion Method of Determining Plagioclases in Cleavage Flakes: Min. Mag., vol. 20, pp. 108-122, 1923.
TURNER, F. J., Mineralogical and Structural Evolution of the Metamorphic Rocks: Geol. Soc. Am. Memoir 30, 342 pp., 1948.
WATSON, T. L., A Preliminary Report on the Granites and Gneisses of Georgia: Geol. Sur Ga., Bull. 9-A, 367 pp., 1902.
181

INDEX

Page
A
Abram and Braswell Properties --------------------------------105
!~~~~1A~~e -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~ ~~
Adams ------------------------------------74, 129 Adirondack anorthosite ____________ 36 Alabama ---------------------------------- ____ 2 Albite -------------------------------------------- 12 Albite twinning -------------------------- 27 Alcovy River ________________________________ 122
Allen ---------------------------------------------- 33 Allotriomorphic __________________________123 Alluvium __________________________ 3, 33, 123 Almond Quarry __________________________ 118 Amphibolite ________4, 15, 16, 17, 18,
20-26, 27, 48, 55, 74, 123 Amphibolite facies ______________76, 123 Amphibolite, origin of____________73-74
Anatexis -------------------------------------- 72 Anderson ------------------------------------- 7 Andesine -------------------"21, 26, 27, 77 Anorthite -------------------------------------- 12 Anticline --------------------------------------123 Antithetic shears __________________38, 123
Apatite -----------------------------12, 13, 31 Aplite ____________8, 10, 12, 41, 71, 123 Aplite dikes ____________________________33, 92 Appalachian Mountains ____________ 63 Appalachian Piedmont ______________ 2 Appalachian Revolution ____________ 77 Arabia Lake __________________18, 50, 109 Arabia Mountain ________3, 32, 37, 50,
52, 80, 98 Arabia Mountain Quarries________106 Argillaceous --------------------------------123 Ashlar facings ____________________________103
Atlanta ------------------------------------------ 1
Atlanta Plateau -------------------------- 2
Atlanta Sheet ------------------------------ 6 Attenuated __________________________________123
Augen ------------------------------------18, 123 Augen mica gneiss ______________________ 18
Autoliths __________________56, 57, 58, 123
Aycock ------------------------------------------109

Page
B
Balk ________________________________36, 60, 129
Ballast ------------------------------------------ 82 Banding ------- 3, 19, 34, 43, 68, 123 Barlow ____________________________________74, 129 Barrow __________________________________________129
Base courses --------------------------------103 Batholith -------------------------------------- 69 Bay Creek ____________________________114, 116 Beadie Property __________________________118
Beauford --------------------------------------108 Becker --------------------------------------3, 129 Belgian blocks ------------------------------ 90 Bergsdalen Quadrangle,
Norway ------------------------------------ 37 Berman ------------------------------------15, 26 Bermuda --------------------------17, 26, 52 Biaxial ------------------------------------------123 Big Ledge Quarry________________72, 105 Biotite ________10, 12, 13, 14, 15, 19,
20, 27, 30, 32, 56 Biotite gneiss ________12, 16, 17, 19, 48 Biotite-hornblende gneiss_A, 16, 26 Biot~t~-hornblende gneiss,
ongm of ------------------------------------ 75 Biotite-muscovite augen schist_ 28 Biotite quartzite -------------------------- 17 Biotite schist __________________________16, 48
Bipyramid ------------------------------------123 Block Quarry ------------------------------ 91 Bowe ----------------------------------------------107 Bowers Quarry ______________________ 85, 96 Bradley Mountain ____________________ 3, 98 Bradley Mountain Quarries______106
Brand Quarry ------------------------------ 97 Brantley ______________________107, 119, 120 Braswell Quarry ________________________122 Brevard schist ________________________15, 16 Britt Quarry ________________________91, 114 Broad Street Bridge____________________111 Brooks Quarries __________________________118
c
Calcite ------------------------------11, 13, 70 Calloway Mills Co, ______________________l18 Calloway Quarry ________________________118 Campbell Property ____________:_______ 96

132

I N D E X - Continued

Page
CCaarrbboonniafteeroruosckssh~-i~-,--Ch~~i-~~i--- 75
analysis of -------------------------------- 75 Carolina Gneiss ______________________15, 16 Carter Quarry ____________________________121
Cates --------------------------------------------117 Centerville __________3, 17, 20, 28, 30,
38, 52, 83, 116
Central Upland Physiographic Province ------------------------------------ 2
Chandler --------------------------------------119 Chapman -------------------------------------- 7 Chapman Quarry ------------------------ 97 Chemical weatherings ________________ 6
Chlorite ---------------------------------------- 26 Clack Quarries ---------------------------- 97 Clinozoisite ______________________________15, 32
Cloos --------------------------7, 38, 63, 129 Coffey ------------------------------------------ 7 Coffey Granite Co.____________________7, 82 Coffey Quarries ______________________ 92, 98
Collinsville Mountain --------------10, 33, 97, 107
g~i~~v~~:---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~:_ 1~~
Composite dikes -------------------------- 33 Compositional layering ______________ 48
Conformable --------------------------------123 Conglomerate ________________________16, 123
Consolidated Quarry Corporation ____________________7, 34, 82, 98-102
Contorted --------------------------------------123 Contorted granite gneiss __________ 8 Conyers ____________________________________ 2, 118
Cooper ------------------------------------------102 Cooper Quarry ----------------------------102 Coordinates of Deformation ______ 62
Copings ----------------------------------------103 Cotton --------------------------------------------118 Cown Quarry ______________________________ 121 Crenulations ____________________________38, 52
Crickmay ____________________________6, 8, 129
Cross joints ----------------------------------123
Crushed stone ------------------------------ 89
Curbing ----------------------------------------103
Curb stone ------------------------------------ 82

Page
D
Daly ----------------------------------------69, 129 Damourite ------------------------------------ 31 Darton ------------------------------------16, 129 Davidson Brothers __7, 72, 103, 107 Davidson Corporation ______103, 104 Davidson Granite
Co. ____________7, 82, 89, 90, 102-107 Davis Quarry ______________________________ 107 DeKalb County__________2, 7, 85, 91, 96,
97, 98 DeKalb County
Quarry ______________41, 82, 108, 109 Dendritic ----------------------------------3, 123 Diabase __________________________33, 64, 123 Diamond saws ____________________________103
Dimension stone ------------------------- 82 Diopside ____________________________ 21, 24, 77 Discordant ____________________________________ 123 Dispersion ____________________________________124 Drag folds ____________________________41, 124
E
Easton Car and Construction Co. ----------------------------------------------100
Edwards Quarry ------------------------ 92 Elliot Quarries ____________________________108
Ellipsoid --------------------------------------124 Emmons --------------------------------12, 129 Epidote ________11, 13, 15, 19, 20, 21,
25, 27, 70, 77 Epidote-hornblende
gneiss ----------------------------16, 20, 21 Equigranular ______________________________124 Eskola ____________________________________72, 129
Ethel Quarry ------------------------------ 92 Euhedral ________________________________11, 124
F
Fabric --------------------------------------------124 Fabric diagrams ____________________ 65, 68 Fairbairn ______________________________65, 129 Fairchild Aerial Surveys __________ 6 Farmer Quarry __________________________ 118
Faults -------------------------------------------- 54 Feldspar ________________________4, 6, 20, 30

133

I N D E X - Continued

Page
Fine-grained biotite gneiss ________ 28
Fissure ------------------------------------------124 Flat Rock Quarry____________________82, 93 Flow Folds ______________________19, 34, 124 Flow sheet _________________101, 102, 104 Flow structures ________________________55-57 Flowage :foliation ________________55, 124
Fluctuation, mica ------------------------ 57 Fluorite ------------------------------------12, 32 Fluvial cycle -------------------------------- 3 Fold axis -------------------------------------124 Foliation __________________10, 43, 56, 124
Forest Lake ---------------------------------111 Forrester Quarry ________________________121
Furcron --------------------------------------- 7
G
Gaines Lake --------------------------------108 Gaines Quarry ----------------------------108 Gang .saws ------------------------------------103 Garnet ___10, 11, 13, 15, 19, 32, 43 Garnet-cummingtonite gneiss____ 28 Garneti:ferous ____________________________124 Garnetiferous layers ________8, 10, 12,
34, 35, 37, 68, 69, 70 Garnet-kyanite gneiss ---------------- 29 Garnet-mica
schist ________________4, 15, 16, 17, 18
Garnet schist -------------------------------- 16 Geologic History ______________________78-80
Geologic Map of Georgia __________________8, 15, 62, 129
Georgia Piedmont ---------------------- 1 Georgia Railroad____2, 80, 107, 113 Gneiss ------------------------------10, 15, 124 Grain --------------------------------------39, 124 Granite _____________________________2, 74, 124
Granite gneiss ---------------------------- 8 Granitization ______________________________124 Granoblastic ____________10, 18, 69, 124
Graphitic schist -------------------------- 16 Grayson ----------------------------------------116 Groundmass _______________________________124 Guthrie Quarry __________________________121
Gwinnett County ____________2, 7, 96, 114, 116
Gwinnett County Quarry____________114

Page
H
Haliburton-Bancro:ft Area, Canada ------------------------------------ 74
Hallimond ______________________________24, 129 Hammock Quarry _____________________109
Hardness -------------------------------------- 86 Hardway ------------------------------------- 39 ~atch ------------------------------29, 30, 129 Hayden Estate ____________________________109 Hayden Quarry __________________________109
Hayes Quarry ------------------------------115 Haygood Brothers ______________________119
Haygood Quarry ------------------------109 Hess ----------------------------------------25, 129 Hills ---------------------------------------65, 129 Hog Mountain ------------------------------ 85 Hog Mountain Property____________ 96 Hornblende ________22, 24, 26, 33, 77 Hornblende gneiss ____________4, 21, 22 Hornblende gneiss, chemical
analyses of ----------------------------- 23 Hornblende gneiss, modal
analyses of ----------------------------- 24 Hornblende, optical properties
of ------------------------------------------------ 24 Hutchens Quarry ________________________110
Hyalite ------------------------------------------ 31
I
Iddingsite ------------------------------------ 33 Idioblastic ______________________________21, 124
Idiomorphic --------------------------18, 124 Igneous ---------------------------------------124 Igneous rocks ___________________________29-33 Ilmenite __________________________15, 19, 20
Incipient ------------------------------------124 Index mineral _____________________76, 124 Index of refraction_____________________124 Inequigranular _____________________10, 20 Interstratified ____________________________124
Isoclinal ----------------------------------------124
J
Jetty stone ------------------------------------ 90 Johannsen ------------------------------29, 130 Johnson Quarry ________________110, 115

134

I N D E X - Continued

Page
Johnston Quarry ______110, 115, 119 Joints __________________________55, 60, 63, 124 Jonas ______________________________________16, 130
Jones Quarry ------------------------------116
K Kaolin ______________________________________4, 124

Page
Little Haynes Creek __________________121 Little Stone
Mountain .....3, 10, 33, 41, 80, 97 Loganville __________116, 117, 121, 122 Longitudinal folds ________50, 62, 125
M

Kaolinite -------------------------------------- 33 Keith -------------------------------------------- 16 Kelley Quarry ------------------------------116 Kellogg ________________________________7, 82, 94 Kellogg Granite Co.________________7, 82
Kellogg Quarry -------------------------- 94 Kennedy --------------------------------15, 130 Kesler ------------------------------------74, 130 King ------------------------------------------7, 94 Kings Mountain, N. C.______________ 74 Klondike __________________________________34, 55 Kuenen ____________________________35, 36, 130 Kvale ______________________________________37, 130 Kyanite-graphite schist ____________ 16
Kyanite zone --------------------------------125
L
Laccolite __________________________________6, 125 La Forge __________________________2, 16, 130
Langley ----------------------------------------117 Larsen ____________________________________26, 130
Lawrenceville ------------------------------116 Ledges ------------------------------------------ 80 Ledges, raising of________________________ 88 Length fast __________________________________125 Length slow __________________________________125 Lester __________________6, 16, 33, 69, 130 Lineation _________________20, 52-54, 125
Lincoln --------------------------------------------29 Lincoln Arc Welding
Foundation ------------------------------100 Lithonia ____________________2, 3, 8, 17, 30 Lithonia gneiss ______3, 4, 5, 6, 8-15,
17, 19, 32, 34, 35, 38, 50, 52, 60, 65, 68, 69, 70, 72, 74, 84, 97-122 Lithonia gneiss, chemical analyses of -------------------------------- 71 Lithonia gneiss, origin of________68-72 Lithonia gneiss, structures of ________________34-41, 44, 45, 46, 47

Macadam -------------------------------------- 90 Magma -------------------------'---------------- 69 Magnetite ____________________8, 13, 20, 33 Mahoney Quarry ________________________119 Major axis of uplift__________________ 62 Mantle ________________________________3, 4, 125
Marble ------------------------------------16, 125 Matrix __________________________________________125 McCart Quarry ____________________________116 McClendon Quarries __________________111 McCuller Quarry ________________________121
McDaniel Mountain -------------------- 97 McElvany Shoals Quarry__________116 McMayer Quarry ________________________111
Meanders -------------------------------------- 3 Megascopic __________________________________125
Meladiorite ----------------------------------125 Metamorphic grade ____________________125 Metamorphic facies ____________76, 125 Metamorphic rocks ________15-28, 125 Metamorphic rocks, structures
of --------------------------------------------43-55 Metamorphism __________71, 76, 77, 125 Metamorphism, causes ______________ 77
Mica diagrams ---------------------------- 65 Mica fluctuation __________________57, 125
Mica gneiss ---------------------------------- 16 Mica lineation __________________38, 39, 63
Mica schist ________16, 34, 68, 69, 70 Microcline __________10, 12, 13, 14, 20,
30, 33, 36, 70, 72 Midland Slope ---------------------------- 2 Migmatite --------------------------8-15, 125 Migmatization ---------------------------- 71 Mile Rock ____________________3, 69, 82, 98 Milstead ______________________________119, 120
Mineral composition __________________ 87 Minor axes of uplift____________________ 62
Minor folds ---------------------------------- 48 Molybdenite ---------------------------------- 33

135

I N D E X -::- Continued

Page Monadnock ________________________2, 3, 125 Monumental stone ________________90, 103 Moon Quarries -----------------------------117 Muscovite ____ 5, 11, 13, 18, 19, 20,
29, 31, 32, 38, 43, 56, 70 Muscovite-kyanite schist __________ 28 Muscovite quartzite ________4, 15, 16,
17, 18, 19, 48, 65 Muscovite-quartz
schist ---~------------16, 17, 20, 48, 55
N
Nash and McCurdy Quarry______ 91 New York ----------------------------------- 2 "Nigger heads" -------------------------- 33 Norris Lake ------------------------------ 48 Norris Lake dam____________________48, 54 North Georgia Quarries ____103, 107 Norton Quarry ----------------------------119
0
Ochre --------------------------------------------125 Oligoclase __________10, 11, 12, 13, 15,
18, 19, 30, 33, 70, 72 Orogeny ---------------------------------------125 Overstreet ------------------------------------ 7 Owens -------------------------------------------118 Oxbow lakes ____________________________3, 125
p
Panola ------------------------------------------ 96 Panola granite ________________________85, 96 Paragenesis __________________________12, 125
Park Quarry --------------------------------111 Parker ------------------------------------------118 Pavements ______________________________3, 125 Pegmatite ________________________8, 41, 125 Pegmatite dikes ______________32, 36, 48 Peneplain --------------------------------------125 Petrofabric analysis _____64-65, 125 Petrofabric diagrams ---------------- 66 Petrogenesis _____________________________68-75 Petrography ______________:_______8-33, 125 Peyton ------------------------------------------ 7 Phalen ------------------------------------------ 16 Phenocrysts __________________________85, 126
Phlogopite ------------------------------------ 29

Page
Phlogopite quartzite ------------------ 29 Pickering -------------------------------------- 7 Pierce Quarry ------------------------------118 Pine Mountain _________________________3, 80
Pine Mountain Quarry______103, 106 Pirkle Quarry ______________________________119 Plagioclase ______________________12, 21, 22 Planimetric map ____________________ 6, 126
Pleochroic -----------------------------15, 126 Plication -------------------------------------126 Plunkett Quarries _____________102, 111
Pluton -----------------------------------30, 126 Poikilitic -------------------------------------126 Poikiloblastic ------------------------10, 126 Pole Bridge Creek_____________________ 94 Polecat Stone ______________________________ 109 Polyhedral _____________________10, 18, 126 Polysynthetic twinning ______15, 126 Pneumatic surfacers __________________ 103
Porphyritic ---------------------------------126 Porphyroblastic __________________________ 126 Porphyroblastic biotite
gneiss ______________________________4, 16, 27
Porphyroblasts ________10, 11, 20, 21, 27, 126
Potash metasomatism ---------------- 70 Poultry grit __________________________99, 103 Powell Quarries __________________________ 112
Prism --------------------------------------------126 Production, Consolidated
Quarry Corporation ________________ 99
Production, Davidson Brothers Corporation ____________ 104
Ptygmatic ------------------------------------126 Ptygmatic folds ______________________ 35, 36 Ptygmatic quartz veins _____________ 100 Purington _______________________6, 29, 130 Pyrite ________________________________13, 29, 33 Pyroxene __________________________________ 21, 27
Pyroxene-hornblende gneiss _20, 21
Q
Quarries, DeKalb County ------------- 91-95, 96, 97-113
Quarries, description of_______ 90-122 Quarries, Gwinnett
County ________________________96, 114-117

136

I N D E X - Continued

Page
Quarries, Lithonia gneiss ______ 97-122 (~uarries, Panola granite __________ 96 Quarries, Rockdale
County ________________________ 96, 118-121 Quarries, Stone Mountain
granite -------------------------------- 91-96 Quarries, Walton County____121-122
Quarrying methods -------------------- 88 Quartz ________10, 11, 12, 13, 18, 19,
20, 29, 30, 33, 36, 43, 69, 70 Quartz diagrams ------------------------ 65 Quartzite ________________________16, 69, 126
Quartz monzonite _________ 29-32, 83, 90-96, 126
Quartz-muscovite schist ____________ 17
Quartz schist -------------------------------- 16

R

Read _________________________________________35, 130 Reagin __________________________________________ 120

Reagin Granite Co.--------------------- 98 Reagin Quarries ________________112, 120
Redan ________________________________30, 83, 95

Relic _______________ ----------------------------126 Replacement ___________________________70, 126

Replacement textures ---------------- 10

Rift

______________________________ 88, 126

Rip rap ____ ----------------------------------103 Rittman ---------------------------------------- 30 Rittman zone method----------------- 12 Road metal ____ ------------------------------ 82 Roan gneiss --------------------------15, 16 Robertson Quarry ---------------------- 94 Rock Ch:::pel Mountain ___ 3, 17, 18,
33, 34, 37, 39, 82, 98, 99 Rockdale
County _________ 2, 7, 96, 118, 120 Rockdale County Quarry___________ 120 Rockmore Quarry ________________________ 122
Rock Springs Church ----------------- 50 Rosette ------------------------------------------126 Rosiwal Analysis _______________________ 126 Rubble ____________________________________ 90, 103

Ryan ---------------------------------------------- 7
s
Sandy Rock Creek --------------------..121 "Sap" ___ ______________________________5, 126

Page
Saprolite ________________4, 5, 15, 18, 19, 20, 27, 126
Sawyer Quarry ----------------------------117 Scales Quarries --------------------------113 Schist --------------------------------------------126 Schistosity ____3, 4, 18, 19, 43, 126 Scolecite __________________________12, 15, 108 Sederholm ______________________ 35, 71, 130
Sedimentary rocks ----------------------126 Segregation ---------------------------------- 69 Seriate ------------------------------------------127 Sericite ____________________________________13, 31
Sericitized ------------------------------------127 Serrate ---------------------------.10, 84, 127 Severinghaus ____7, 82, 99, 100, 130 Sexton Quarry ---------------------------- 94 Shaw Quarry ------------------------------120 Shearing ----------------------------------37, 70 Shear planes -------------------------------- 18 Shear zones ________8, 19, 36, 37, 41,
63, 127 Sheeting __________________39, 60, 80, 127 Side dump trailer________________________ 100 Sierra Nevada Pluton._______________ 37 Sillimanite ________________________ 19, 28, 76
Sillimanite-almandine subfacies ---------------------------------- 76
Sillimanite-quartz schist __________ 28
Sillimanite zone ------------------------ 127 Sims Quarry _______________________________ 120
Slate ---------------------------------------------- 16 Smith ________________________________________ 5, 130 Smith Quarries __________________________113
Smith Quarry ------------------------------ 95 Snowball structure ---------------------- 18
Southern Granite Co. _________ so, 105
South Mountain -------------------------- 63 South River ---------------------------------- 3 Spalling __________________________________6, 127 Sphene ______________________________ 13, 21, 74
Staurolite -------------------------------------- 19 Staurolite-kyanite subfacies ____ 76 Staurolite zone ____________________________ 127
Stephenson Creek ---------------------- 18 Still ------------------------------------------------122 Stock ---------------------------------------------- 69 Stone, cost of _______________________________ 100

137

I N D E X - Continued

Page
Stone Industry ________________________80-89 Stone Industry, history of __________ 80 Stone Mountain ______ 2, 3, 6, 17, 30,
32, 33, 43, 50, 54, 56, 57, 60, 63, 64, 82 Stone Mountain Creek________________ 26 Stone Mountain granite ______3, 5, 6, 27, 29-32, 54, 55, 64, 65, 83, 90-96 Stone Mountain Granite and Railroad Co. ---------------------------- 80 Stone Mountain granite, composition of ------------------------ 31 Stone Mountain Granite Corporation ------------------------------ 94 Stone Mountain granite, origin of ---------------------------------- 75 Stone Mountain granite, structures of ________________________55-62 Stone Mountain Grit Co. __________103 Stone production ____83, 90, 99, 104 Stone, types of __________________________83-85 Stone, uses of____________________________89-90' Stone, value of________________________83, 89 S-surfaces ______________________________68, 127
Striated ----------------------------------------127 Structure -----------------"-------------------- 86 Structural Geology ________________34-65 Sundius ____________________22, 24, 77, 130
Sutured ----------------------------------------127 Symplectitic __________________10, 12, 127
Syncline ----------------------------------------127 Syntectonic ____________________________70, 127 Synthetic shears ________________________127
T
Talc ------------------------------------------------ 26 Talc-actinolite-chlorite
schist -------------------------16, 20, 25-26 Tan Yard Branch________________________118
Texture ---------------------------------------- 87 Thomas ---------------------------------------- 7 Tom George Creek______________________l12
Tourmaline ----------------------18, 19, 30 Tourmaline
clusters ____________60, 61, 83, 93, 95
Tourmaline rosettes -------------------- 92 Transverse folds __________________52, 127

Page
Tsuboi ------------------------------------12, 131 Turner -------------------------------------76, 77 Turner Quarry ____________________________113
Twin laws ------------------------------------ 30 Twinning --------------------------------------127
u
Undulatory folds ------------------------ 52 Universal Stage __________________________127 U ralite ------------------------------------------ 33 Uranophane ____________________________31, 93 Uranophane, chemical
composition of ________________________ 32
v
Venable ---------------------------------------- 93 Venable Brothers ------------------------ 80 Venable Estate Quarries____________ 95
Virginia ---------------------------------------- 16 Volcanic activity ------------------------ 74
w
Walton County ____________________________121 Washed sand, uses of ________________100 Watson ______________1, 6, 8, 80, 85, 90,
91, 107, 131 Weathering pits -------------------------- 5 Weiblen and Sons____________________91, 94
Wells ----------------------------------------29, 30 Wells Quarry ------------------------------ 95 Werner ------------------------------------------ 7 Wilson Quarry ____________________________113 Winchell ____________14, 15, 19, 22, 25,
26, 27, 31 Windsor Bridge Quarry___________ 122 Wissahickon biotite gneiss__________ 16 Woodruff Quarry ______________________117
Works Progress Administration __________________ 82, 94
X
Xenoblastic _____10, 19, 20, 84, 127 Xenolith ____________________57-60, 69, 127

138

I N D E X - Continued

Page

y

z

Yancy Quarry ____________________117, 122 Yarborough ----------------""""----- 97 Yellow River ______________________3, 28, 57

Zig zag folds __________________________43, 114
Zingara ----------------------------------------119 Zircon __________________12, 13, 15, 19, 20

139

84"10 '

40 J'
;
; '
!
! .
./ ./
'. :
I
I""
I

PLATE I
EXPLANATION

Q u a t e r nary

Alluvium (Colluvium and Stream Alluvium)

IGNEOUS ROCKS

~

Tri assic

D iabas~ dike

Pegmatite dikes
Perm ian (?)
Stone Mountain granite
METAMORPHIC ROCKS
G
Porphyroblasiic biotite g neiss (Includes porphyroblastic biotite gneiss, with interlayered amphibolite, fine-grained biot ite gneiss, biotite schist, srllimanite-quartz sch ist, garnet-cummingtonite gneiss, garnetifetous kyanite gneio;s, kya nite-muscovite schist, and phlogopite CJUarhite j abundant pegmatite di kes are instrusive into the gneiss)

Biotite-hornblende gneiss
(medi um-gra ined, well banded epidote-biotite-hornblende gneiss; often contains amphibol ite bands}

A mphibol ite
(inc I u des epidote - pyroxene-hornblende gneiss, epidote-her n ble nde gneiss, and hor nblende gneiss int erlayered with biotite gneissi the amphibolite occurs as fine-t o me diu mgrained la yers or lenses within porphyroblastic biotite gneiss_
tas; talc-actinol ite- chlorite augen schist within certain amphibolite layers)

~

n w

Muscovite-quartz schist

3

{fine to medi um.gra ined mu~covite

,;S;;f

quartz schist)

Biotite gneiss
(medi umgrained biotite gneiss; ind ividua l biotite and quartz-feldspar bands up to 3mm. wide)

Muscovite quartzite
(muscovite quartzite, locally contains garnet and kyan ite)

Garnet.mica schist (garnet-muscovite -biotite schi st with interlayered amphibolite and finegrained biotite gneiss; sillimanite locally present)
MIGMATITE
B
Lithonia gneiss (medium-grained, evenly banded biot ite gneiss with locally abundant ga rnet.rich layers; the rock has been dislocated along numerous shear zones, and migmatized by syntectonic aplite, pegmatite, and granite dikes)
CONTACTS
O bserved conta ct Float contact
Inferred contact

STRUCTURES

Strike and dip of: I, banding; 2, schistosity; 3, flow fol iation
horizontal band ing, eic.
vertical banding, etc.
strike and plunge of mica lin eation
hot 1zontal mica lineation
sfrike and plunge of axes of small, tight fo ld s
hori zontal fold axes
sirike and plunge of aw:es of unduletory folds
strike and plunge of flow fold axes
hor izo ntalflow fold axes
axes of muscovi te fluctuation
hornblende orienfation
strike of shear zones, with relative displace~ men t
strike and dip of fault plane, wit h rel ative displacement

10~. ~
I
P.~
~

SPECIAL SYMBOLS
/--.,
l.. . ___./ pavement e:c:posure

( ' large 9uarry

'Y:

small quarry

GEOLOGY AND STRUCTURE OF THE STONE MOUNTAINLITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

PLANIMETR IC BASE MAP PREPARED FROM FAIRCHILD AERIAL SURVEYS PHOTOGRAPHS OF DEK A LB, ROCKDALE, AND GWINNETT COUNTIES , 1939- 1940 FLIGHT. 25000 FOOT GRID CONTROL OBTAINED FROM RO A D MAPS OF DEKALB, ROCKDALE, A ND GWIN NETT COUNTIES. MAP DRAFTED IN 1950 BY L HERRMANN

SCALE

'h

MILES

"2"~=3C~;o~O ==<=CEc======='":C:OO======::::lOI0:0-:======="r."======="r."======::::lSOOO YARDS

GEOLOGY SURVEYED IN 1949 A ND 1950 BY L. HERRMANN

PLATE Z.

.
,0-

GEOLOti/C

STRUCTURE

SECTIONS

OF THE SrONE ltiO UNrAIN- LITHONIA DISTRICT 1 GEORGIA

SrON~ MOUNTAIN 1066 1

CROOKED CREEl(

STONE MOUNTAIN 1686 1

s.L.-

SECTION B- 8 1

aoo' s.L. -

ROCK CHAPEL NOUNTAIN

YELLOW RIVER
~

900 1 S.L.-

LI7HONIJi, GA.

P{JLE BRIDGE CREI!K
t

SECtiON

A-

1
A

SECTION F- p'
CENTERVILLE, GA.

SECTION C- C'
COLLIN~ VILLE MTN.
I
SECTION D- D

HONEY C"RE.E.K
t

1~1
LITHONIA GNEISS

lVI
M ICASCHIST

IZ I
QUARTZ liE

SECTION E- E'

1'1 BIOTITE GNEISS

LEGE NO

AMPHIBOLITE

JL~.:.'I
PORPHYROBLASTIC BIOTITE GNEISS

MUSCOVITEQUARTZ
SCHIST

I# I
BIOTITE-HORNBLENDE
GNEISS

STONE Ml"N. GRANITE

I
DIABASE Dl KE

ALLUVIUM

PRE-CAMBRIAN l?\

LEO A. HERRMANN 19 50

SCALE

0

I

z.

'----v----' PERMIAN 1?\

3

MILES

'---v-----'1
QU,.TER NARY

-------===~=-....................~.~~~h~~1~1R. .IIIIIIIIIII

, /,... .... ............ G

PLATE 3

G

-30

G

15-

G 18 ......________

~12.

G
15
' G
30 20
\"'

10~ G

12.

G

~=-="20
"' 13 ~' 10~ 22 20, ~2.3

25~
II

'

~ 10~

G

,of

"" 1'0

Lgn

Lgn

LINEATION SYMBOLS

STRIKE ANO PLUN~E

\

OFAA'ES OF MUSCO

5 VITE FL l/CTUAT/ON

\

HORIZONTAL MUSCOVITE AXES

STRIKE ANOPUINGE OF FLOW FOLD AXES

I

HORIZONTAL FLOW FOLO AXES

5

~

STRIKE ANO PLt/NGE OF MICA LINEATION

HORIZONTAL MICA LINEATION

25
"

STRIKE ANO PLUNGE OF AXES OF MINOR FOLOS
HORIZONTAL FOLO AXES

ROCK FORNAT/ONS
STONE MOl/NTAIN SMgr - GRANITE

_G -GNEISSES

MICA SCHIST

5

A NIJ QVAI?TZITE

LCJn - LITHONIA GNEISS

FORMATION BOt/NOARIES

G
5
~0 5~ 2.0 G

/_.../-
CONYE' RS

LINEATION MAP OF TI-l STONE MOUNTAIN-LITHONIA 0/STR/Cl; GA. ,

.SCALE
IN MILES

ki1.

/i

2

LEO A. HE{?HMANN 185(

I
INDEX !MAP

B4JO'

~ B4 01'2.o"

3350'

'

3350'

33.37'z3".J--------+33"37'z3"

8 1-10

a4o1'zo"

!.

PLATE 4

JOHNSTON Q. U A RRY
N

SHED

COMPRESSOR

I

50
10 ~"'s

"-

IS

/I " /"'-

~I

LEGEND

WOO OED AREA

STRUCTURE SYMBOLS

...._10 ST"RIKE. ANO PIP

""""-

01' _,ANDING

,.

VER'T"ICAL BANDING

STRIKE AND DIF'
, 4 0 OF DEFD~M~O
&ANDING

I

AS''TTIRVI'WE :&OIASNPLOACR:.EEI...~
MI!.NT 01' .SHE.AR

STRIKE AND PLUNGE OF MICA I.INEATION

STRIKE. ANO PL-UNGE OF FLOW FOLD AXE,:!

........

STRIKE ANO OIP OF .l'OINTS
VERTICALJ'OINT.S

ST"RIKE. AND OIF' OF LARGE .l"OINT WITH MOVEMENT PARA.LLE.L.."TO "TI"E STRIKE

OTHER 5YM60LS

\

QOARRY

~

150UNDARV

1/

BOUNDARY OF PAVEMENT

IN 0 r= X
@ ~~:u~~~~~~:R
01= F'L-A-TE S

S TR UC TURE OF THE LITHONIA GNEISS IN THE
VICINITY OF LITTLE STONE MOUNTAIN
S C A /..E
C:E::E::s=s:,i::======::C==='=======OO~O=,;80~0=~=::;/ZO=O=~=~=~1800 FeET

84 10'
33'55'+

PLATES

+

LEGEND
ROCK PA VEMNT

J

LARGE OUARR Y

SMALL QUARRY

+

\
QUARRY MAP OF THE STONE MOl/NTAIN-

LITHONIA DISTRICT, GEORGIA

SCAL IN MILES

0

2

3

4

5

HUif.IWI/Y NETWORK COVP/LEO FROM OFFICIAL COC/NTY .ROAO MAPS

L..0 A. HERRMAIYN,/95z

---------===~=-------. . . . . . . . . . . . .~.~~-~~~*~'111111111111111