Woodstock Quartz Monzonite | |
---|---|
Stratigraphic range: Silurian or Ordovician | |
Type | igneous |
Area | ~400 Ha |
Lithology | |
Primary | monzonite |
Location | |
Region | Piedmont of Maryland |
Country | United States |
Extent | Western Baltimore County |
Type section | |
Named for | Woodstock, Maryland |
Named by | Williams and Darton, 1892[1] |
The Woodstock Quartz Monzonite is a Silurian or Ordovician quartz monzonite pluton in Baltimore County, Maryland. It is described as a massive biotite-quartz monzonite[2] which intrudes through the Baltimore Gneiss at a single locality surrounding the town of Granite, Maryland.
The extent of this intrusion was originally mapped in 1892[1] as the "Woodstock granite". It was given its current name in 1964 by C. A. Hopson.[3] Hopson grouped the Woodstock Quartz Monzonite with the Ellicott City Granodiorite and the Guilford Quartz Monzonite as "Late-kinematic intrusive masses."
Woodstock granite has been used in the Capitol Building, the Library of Congress, and in buildings in Baltimore.[4]