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Extracting Bulk Rock Properties from Microscale
Measurements: Subsampling and Analytical Guidelines

M.C. McCanta, Dept. of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA; M.D. Dyar, Dept.
of Astronomy, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts 01075, USA; and P.A. Dobosh, Dept. of Computer Science,
Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts 01075, USA

ABSTRACT                                       terminology based on bulk rock character-             formation conditions, as well as pseudo-
                                               istics persists even in the twenty-first              section analysis (e.g., Nutman et al., 1997;
  Geologists are commonly faced with           century. Thus an ironic modern conundrum              Powell et al., 1998; Bucher and Frey, 2002).
questions relating to representative sam-      is this: how many microanalyses of a
pling at all scales: outcrop to formation,     rock are needed to accurately represent                 Despite the importance of bulk rock
hand sample to bulk rock, microanalysis        its bulk composition?                                 data, they are surprisingly complicated to
to overall chemistry. A new computer                                                                 measure. For glassy or fine-grained rocks
model allows quantitative answers to the         The problematic issue is that of scale,             (e.g., pumice or shale), direct microanaly-
question of how many different micro-          i.e., the ratio of sampling size to that of the       ses and bulk techniques easily yield com-
analysis spots are needed to determine         feature being measured. Field geologists              parable results. Complications arise when
different bulk properties of a rock for any    encounter this problem when they set out              a rock contains xenocrysts or rock frag-
type and scale of measurement, including       to sample an outcrop: how many hand                   ments that are not in equilibrium, or when
whole rock composition and oxidation           samples will represent the bulk character-            mineral chemical zonation is present. It
state. The relationships among grain size,     istics of the outcrop, or even the entire             should be obvious why bulk composition
glass ordering, and microbeam size, the        formation? For geochemists, the scale of              calculations are rarely attempted on
composition and heterogeneity of the rocks     interest is that of mineral grain size rela-          coarse-grained samples. For porphyritic or
studied, and the location of the analyses      tive to analytical beam size. As microbeam            most metamorphosed rocks, determining a
relative to textural features are all impor-   techniques continue to sample smaller vol-            bulk composition is possible but tedious.
tant. These variables can be grouped into      umes, the scale may be that of individual             Igneous rocks can be crushed and hand-
those that affect the heterogeneity (H) of     atoms. Increasing resolution only exacer-             picked to separate the glass for melt com-
the material versus the scale of measure-      bates the understanding of bulk geological            position analysis, or mass balance calcula-
ments (M) being used. For rocks where H        properties.                                           tions can be run using glass and crystalline
(grain size, glass long- or short-range                                                              compositions from electron probe micro-
ordering, or composition) <<M (beam              Why are bulk rock analyses important?               analysis (EPMA). Alternatively, material
size), an average of fewer than ten analy-     Because magma composition is rarely, if               can be ground and fused experimentally
ses will yield a representative bulk rock      ever, measured in its liquid state, data from         prior to bulk or microanalysis. These are
composition no matter how heterogeneous        the resulting solidified materials must be            time-consuming tasks, and the accuracy of
the phase assemblage. For rocks where          used to back-calculate original compositions          these estimation methods is difficult to
H  M, hundreds of analyses may be             and conditions. In an era when microanal-             quantify. In addition, the total sample vol-
needed to result in acceptable analytical      ysis is routine, bulk rock composition is             ume may be prohibitively small to apply
precision. Guidelines for how many sam-        still an important parameter because it               these methods to, as is often the case for
ples/analyses are needed to represent geo-     permits correlations with other rocks and             extraterrestrial materials, thereby requir-
logic materials at any scale are presented.    geologically related regions (e.g., Philpotts         ing a microanalytical technique.
                                               and Ague, 2009). On an even broader
INTRODUCTION                                   scale, knowledge of magma source region                 Moreover, “bulk analysis” means differ-
                                               conditions and compositions helps define              ent things for varying scales of geologic
  For more than a century, geologists have     the state of the mantle, provides insight             processes and analytical instruments; a
used bulk analyses (e.g., Bowen, 1928;         into the geochemistry of crystallization              “bulk” analysis for one application may
Daly, 1933; Yoder and Tilley, 1962; BVSP,      and ascent, and characterizes processes               not be useful for another (e.g., Potts et al.,
1981) to develop frameworks and classifi-      affecting composition and redox, such as              1995; Martin, 2003). EPMA routinely mea-
cations for understanding rock paragenesis     assimilation or injection of a new melt               sures sample sizes of 1 × 1 m; handheld
and properties. This practice has its origins  (e.g., Cox et al., 1979; BVSP, 1981;                  Raman or laser-induced breakdown spec-
in the tradition of wet chemistry, which       Asimow, 2000). Bulk rock compositions                 troscopy (LIBS) beam sizes can be nano-
required grams of material for analyses.       and properties may also be important in               meters up to centimeters; an atom probe
Despite the now-widespread availability of     sedimentary and metamorphic rock studies              may have sub-nanometer spatial resolution
modern microanalytical techniques, use of      to provide information on protoliths and              (Fig. 1). When beam size shrinks to the

     GSA Today, v. 27, doi: 10.1130/GSATG290A.1. Copyright 2017, The Geological Society of America.

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