Prospect dolerite intrusion
Prospect dolerite intrusion | |
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City of Blacktown and Cumberland City Council | |
Type section | |
Named for | Prospect, New South Wales |
Named by | Governor Arthur Phillip and Lieutenant (later Governor) Philip Gidley King[1] |
The Prospect dolerite intrusion, or Prospect intrusion, is a
Lying in the heart ofThe site was formed from around 200 million years ago when volcanic material (hot
Igneous activity
Formation

In the Sydney Basin, igneous activity took place in the Early Jurassic activity that resulted in the shaping of the Prospect dolerite intrusion – This unambiguously points that the site had a volcanic origin.[5] The eroded residue of the volcanic core forms the site, which was battered down over millions of years to a small extrusion in the relatively flat lands of western Sydney.[6]
Consequent to the
This allowed hot magmatic fluids, which are around 900–1,000 °C (1,620–1,800 °F), to relocate via developing pegmatite and depositing prehnite, calcite and other subsidiary minerals that are found in the upper part of the intrusion, with analcime dolerite (teschenite) and picrite shaping the bulk of the intrusion site.[8]
Erosion
At the next stage of its geological development, which lasted over 60 million years, was the gradual
The fractures acted as pathway for basaltic magma from the mantle area and a few of these would have been
Geological description

The Prospect Intrusion is one of many
The dome is called a doleritic
Minerals

The hill contains a slender, chilled margin of fine-grained basalt with most of the mass of the intrusion being made up of picrite, dolerite, and high level intrusives. The picrite is a farinaceous-grained rock dominated by olivine and is made up of two-thirds of the lower constituent of the intrusion, with the upper third of dolerite also containing other mafic minerals. The shales above and below the intrusion had very reduced levels of metamorphism and exhibited superficial modification to a fine quartz hornfels with nearly no growth in grain size.[15]
The copious amount of
The site also has had a sweeping collection of other minerals, such as:[18]
- Albite-anorthite series
- Analcime
- Apatite
- Apophyllite (KF)
- Aragonite
- Augite
- Basanite
- Baryte
- Biotite
- Chabazite-Ca
- Calcite
- Chalcedony
- Chlorite Group
- Feldspar group
- Gold
- Halotrichite
- Heulandite
- Ilmenite
- Laumontite
- Leucite
- Marcasite
- Montmorillonite
- Natrolite
- Nephelinite
- Olivine
- Opal
- Pectolite
- Phillipsite
- Pickeringite
- Plagioclase
- Pyrite
- Pyroxene
- Rhombohedra
- Quartz
- Rhyolite
- Siderite
- Smectite group
- Syenite
- Trachybasalt
- Trachyandesite
- Trachyte
- Tuff
History
Discovery, 1788–91
The area of
The site provided a point from which distances could be meaningfully calculated, and became a major reference point for other early explorers.[20][21] While there is no documentary evidence of Watkin Tench having named Prospect Hill, there is no doubt that it is in fact the hill that was shortly afterwards known by that name. In view of Tench's literary allusions to Milton's Paradise Lost, it seems highly probable that the experience of climbing it reminded him of the "goodly prospect of some forein land first-seen" by Milton's scout and that it was indeed Tench who first named it.[22][original research?]
Observation, 19th century
Quarrying of the basalt plug in the area began in the 1820s. Charles Darwin visited this site in 1835, where he states in his notebook Notes on the Geology of places visited during the Voyage:[23]
"At Prospect Hill the sandstone country is intermitted by a mass of Trappean rocks, the quarry which I saw consisted of a black Basalt(?) the structure of which was roughly prismatic. I imagine, but have no proof that this has burst through the Sandstone."
James Dwight Dana, an American geologist, arrived in Sydney in on 29 November 1839 and visited the intrusion site. In January 1840, William Branwhite Clarke, geologist and Church of England reverend, travelled with Dana to the intrusion site to study the rocks. Dana analysed material from the site and recorded his expedition in Vol 10 of the United States Exploring Expedition. Dana described the rock material from Prospect as:[24]
"A dark bluish rock, finely porphyritic, with small points (not tables) of feldspar. It occurs at Prospect Hill...A porphyritic basalt, in which the augite and feldspar are both distinct, and some of the crystals of the augite are a fourth of an inch long. It occurs at Prospect Hill...The compact black basalt changes to a compact rock, with disseminated points of feldspar; next, to a porphyritic basalt, with distinct crystals of both augite and feldspar; and next, to the feldspar rock in which Augite is almost wholly wanting."
Land development, 1900s–present
The bulk of the present
The then Minister for Urban Affairs & Planning took over planning powers for the employment area in November 2000 and approved the Employment Precinct Plan in June 2001, approving subdivision and associated works in the northern employment lands later in June 2001. Since, parts of the employment land have been sold and further subdivided and sold. The
Heritage listing
As at 19 February 2001, the area where the dolerite intrusion is situated in had state significance due to its unique combination of significant landscape feature, potential archaeological site, and association with important historical phases. As a dolerite outcrop that rises to a height of 117 metres (384 ft) AHD, it is a unique geological and significant topographic feature providing panoramic views across the Cumberland Plain. The intrusion site, which is situated on Prospect Hill, was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 17 October 2003.[26] The site is mentioned in the 'SHR Criteria C', under 'Aesthetic significance':
Prospect Hill has aesthetic significance as Sydney's largest body of igneous rock, which rises to a height of 117 metres and provides expansive views across the Cumberland Plain. The large dolerite formation of Prospect Hill is a rare geological and landmark topographic feature, lying centrally within the Cumberland Plain.[3]
See also
References
- ^ King, P. G. (1793). Hunter, J. (ed.). An Historical Journal of the Transactions at Port Jackson and Norfolk Island. London: Stockdale.
- ^ Igneous intrusions by the Australian Museum. 13 November 2018. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
- ^ a b Ashton, W. (2000). Landscape Heritage Assessment: CSIRO Division of Animal Production.
- ^ NSW Government Architect's Office, Prospect Hill Heritage Landscape Study and Plan, NSW Department of Commerce, 2008, p 31.
- ^ Johnson R. W. (1989). Volcano distribution and classification. In: Johnson R. W., Knutson J. And Taylor S. R. eds. Intraplate Volcanism: In Eastern Australia and New Zealand, pp. 7 11. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
- ISBN 978-0-521-38083-6.
- ^ Jones, I., and Verdel, C. (2015). Basalt distribution and volume estimates of Cenozoic volcanism in the Bowen Basin region of eastern Australia: Implications for a waning mantle plume. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 62(2), 255-263.
- ^ Branagan, D.F., and Packham, G.H., 2000. Field Geology of New South Wales. 3rd Edition. New South Wales Department of Mineral Resources, Sydney.
- ^ Conybeare Morrison, Prospect Hill Conservation Management Plan, Holroyd City Council, 2005
- ^ Jones, I., Verdel, C., Crossingham, T., and Vasconcelos, P. (2017). Animated reconstructions of the Late Cretaceous to Cenozoic northward migration of Australia, and implications for the generation of east Australian mafic magmatism. Geosphere, 13(2), 460-481.
- ^ Compton, K., Mindat: Prospect, New South Wales
- ^ William M.L. & Carr P.F., Isotope systematics of secondary minerals from the Prospect Intrusion, New South Wales, Australian Journal of Earth Sciences (2005) Volume 52, Issue 6, 2005
- ^ Wilshire, HG, The Prospect Alkaline Diabase-Picrite Intrusion New South Wales, Australia, Journal of Petrology (1967) 8 (1): pp 97-163
- ^ Wilshire: Wilshire, H.G., The Prospect alkaline diabase-picrite intrusion, New South Wales, Australia in Journal of Petrology, Vol. 8 (1), pp 97-163, 1967.
- ^ Prospect, New South Wales By Keith Compton, Mindat.org, Hudson Institute of Mineralogy 1993-2021. Retrieved 1 November 2021.
- ^ HODGE-SMITH, T. (1943) Mineralogical notes No. VI. Records of the Australian Museum, 21 (4), 251.
- ^ England, B. M. (1994) Minerals of the Prospect Intrusion, New South Wales, Australia. Mineralogical Record 25, pp.185-194.
- ^ CLARK, B. (1976) The Prospect Intrusion. Mineralogical News, 12, 8-11.
- ^ Higginbotham, Edward (2000). Historical and Archaeological Assessment of CSIRO site.
- ^ Karskens, Grace (1991). Holroyd - A social history of Western Sydney.
- ^ White, J. (1790). Journal of a Voyage to New South Wales. London: J. Debrett.
- ^ Milton. J. (1667). Paradise Lost. Vol. II. p. 917.
- ^ Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands, visited during the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle (1844)
- ^ Vol 10 of the United States Exploring Expedition during the years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, 1842 under the command of Charles Wilkes, USN-Geology by James D Dana pp 495-501
- ^ Holroyd 2007: Holroyd Development Control Plan 2007, (Part G: Former CSIRO Site Pemulwuy Residential Lands – Western Precinct), Holroyd City Council, 2007.
- .
Attribution
This Wikipedia article was originally based on Prospect Hill, entry number 01662 in the New South Wales State Heritage Register published by the State of New South Wales (Department of Planning and Environment) 2018 under CC-BY 4.0 licence, accessed on 2 June 2018.
External links
- Minerals of the prospect intrusion The Free Library by Farlex.inc