Mineral Database
Rectorite
- Silicates
an interstratified clay mineral found in a variety of sedimentary environments. Rectorite also occurs in some low-temperature hydrothermal argillic alteration zones, along veins and pervasively replacing potassic feldspar. In altered bentonites; may develop from muscovite during diagenesis of shales. Rectorite, previously known as allevardite, is a clay mineral with a structure consisting of a regular interleaving of dioctahedral mica and dioctahedral smectite layers. It is a mineral which forms under low-temperature hydrothermal conditions, where it typically replaces potassic feldspar, or during by the diagenetic alteration of muscovite in altered bentonite (fine-grained clay horizons derived from volcanic dust).
Gill et al. (1977) noted the presence of allevardite associated with pyrophyllite in anchizone pelites from the anthracite area of the South Wales Coalfield; the mineral name allevardite has been superseded by rectorite. Elsewhere in Wales Merriman & Roberts (1985) recorded the presence of rectorite in a number of Arenig and Llanvirn (Ordovician) age pelites from Snowdonia and Llŷn, on the basis of X-ray diffraction analysis. It is restricted, however, to pelites which have undergone contact metamorphism prior to regional metamorphism. Microprobe analyses presented by Merriman & Roberts (1985) show that in the samples of Arenig age the expansible component of the rectorite is Ca-smectite, while in the samples of Llanvirn age it is a Na-smectite. A more recent X-ray diffraction study has recorded rectorite in a pelite sample in the valley of the Afon Seiont, 2 km southeast of Caernarfon Castle (Jiang et al., 1990).