BH250-100c

Title

BH250-100c

Subject

Morton Gneiss Saprolite

Description

The Morton Saprolite near Redwood Falls, Minnesota, formed through deep chemical weathering of the Precambrian Morton Gneiss, one of the oldest rock units on Earth. As the gneiss weathers, it produces a distinctive mineral assemblage including quartz, kaolinite, sericite (white mica), gibbsite, goethite, and hematite. Despite extensive mineralogical alteration, the saprolite preserves the original fabric and banding of the gneiss a hallmark feature of saprolitic weathering. The weathered material is typically reddish to yellowish-brown, reflecting the abundance of iron oxides.

This part of the sample is less weathered Morton Gneiss than BH250-100, 100b

This saprolite has been the subject of multiple geochemistry student research projects, particularly focusing on its mineralogy, weathering processes, and geochemical evolution. Documentation and findings from these student studies are available through resources linked on this website.

Several student projects have explored this subject; please refer to the papers, abstracts, and posters available on the Geochemistry of Natural Waters website.

For more discussion on the Morton Saprolite see BH250-100

Creator

Bereket Haileab

Source

From the rock collection of Bereket Haileab. Sample 100c. Housed at Carleton College in Minnesota.

Type

Thin section and hand sample

Relation













Collection

Citation

Bereket Haileab, “BH250-100c,” BH250 Mineralogy Teaching Collection, accessed April 25, 2026, https://bereket-haileab.geology.sites.carleton.edu/items/show/354.

Output Formats