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Origin
"fire-formed rocks" Crystallize from molten material:
Magma - below the Earth's surface Lava - erupts onto the Earth's surface through a volcano or crack (fissure)
Cooling Rates
Cooling rates influence the texture if the igneous rock:
Igneous textures:
Obsidian
Rhyolite
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Phaneritic - coarse grain size; visible grains (1-10 mm); result of slow cooling
Granite - polished
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Porphyritic- Mixture of grain sizes caused by mixed cooling history; slow cooling first, followed by a period of somewhat faster cooling.
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Terms for the textural components: Phenocrysts - the large crystals Groundmass or matrix - the finer crystals surrounding the large crystals. The groundmass may be either aphanitic or phaneritic.
Origin: mixed grain sizes and hence cooling rates, imply upward movement of magma from a deeper (hotter) location of extremely slow cooling, to either: a much shallower (cooler) location with fast cooling (porphyriticaphanitic), or a somewhat shallower (slightly cooler) location with continued fairly slow cooling (porphyritic-phaneritic).
Rock name = porphyry Granite porphyry or porphyritic granite (porphyritic-phaneritic) phenocrysts usually potassium feldspar
Granite porphyry
Rhyolite
porphyry
or
porphyritic
rhyolite
(porphyritic-aphanitic)
Rhyolite Porphyry
Vesicular - contains tiny holes called vesicles which formed due to gas bubbles in the lava or magma. Very porous. May resemble a sponge. Commonly low density; may float on water.
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Vesicular basalt - basalt with a vesicles, which may be quite large. Sometimes lined with crystals to form geodes.
Vesicular basalt
Vesicular basalt with olivine phenocrysts, building stone at Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, Big Island of Hawaii
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Pumice - light in color; white to gray; may be glassy or dull. Fully riddled with holes. Very sponge-like. Floats. Used as an abrasive. (Pumice stone, Lava Soap).
Pumice
Pumice
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Scoria - dark in color; brown, black, or dark red; similar to vesicular basalt but is fully riddled with holes to form a spongy mass. (May find in barbecue grills as lava rock).
Scoria
Pyroclastic or Fragmental - pieces of rock and ash come out of a volcano and get welded together by heat. May resemble rhyolite or andesite, but close examination shows pieces of fine-grained rock fragments in it. May also resemble a sedimentary
conglomerate or breccia, except that rock fragments are all fine-grained igneous or vesicular.
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Tuff - made of volcanic ash Volcanic breccia - contains fragments of fine-grained igneous rocks that are larger than ash.
Pyroclastic rock
Granite
2. Rhyolite
Rhyolite 6. Minerals commonly present include: 1. potassium feldspar (generally pink or white) 2. Na-plagioclase feldspar (generally white) 3. quartz (generally gray or colorless) 4. biotite 5. amphibole? 6. muscovite?
2. Intermediate (or andesitic) 1. Intermediate in composition between sialic and mafic 2. Rock types include: 1. Andesite (aphanitic) 2. Diorite (phaneritic)
Diorite
3. Minerals commonly present include: 1. plagioclase feldspar 2. amphibole 3. pyroxene 4. biotite 5. quartz
3. Mafic (or basaltic) 1. Contains abundant ferromagnesian minerals (magnesium and iron silicates) 2. Usually dark in color (dark gray to black) 3. Characteristic of Earth's oceanic crust, Hawaiian volcanoes 4. Forms a runny (low viscosity) lava 5. Also found on the Moon, Mars, and Venus 6. Rock types include: 1. Basalt (aphanitic)
Gabbro
3. Diabase
texture
intermediate
between
basalt
and
gabbro;
characteristic of Early Mesozoic dikes in eastern North America. 7. Minerals commonly present include: 1. Ca-plagioclase feldspar 2. pyroxene 3. olivine 4. amphibole
4. Ultramafic 1. Almost entirely magnesium and iron silicates (ferromagnesian minerals) 2. Rarely observed on the Earth's surface 3. Believed to be major constituent of Earth's mantle 4. Commonly found as xenoliths in basaltic lavas 5. Rock types include: 1. Peridotite (phaneritic) 1. dominated by olivine - the birthstone is Peridot, which gives its name to Peridotite
Peridotite 6. Minerals commonly present include: 1. Olivine is dominant. (Olivine is olive green). 2. may have minor amounts of pyroxene and Ca-plagioclase
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A polished syenite called larvikite with centimeter- to inch-scale gray to blue plagioclase crystals. The industrial name for the rocks is "blue pearl". Photographed in an above-ground cemetery in New Orleans, LA
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2. Continuous reaction series, from Ca plagioclase to Na plagioclase. The discontinuous reaction series involves the dark-colored ferromagnesian minerals: 1. olivine 2. pyroxene 3. amphibole 4. biotite. As a magma cools, olivine crystallizes first. The olivine crystals react with the remaining magma to form pyroxene. Pyroxene reacts with the magma to form amphibole. Amphibole reacts with the magma to form biotite. Each successive mineral, from olivine to biotite, has a different composition and a different silicate crystal structure. As crystallization proceeds, the crystal structures become more complex (olivine has an isolated tetrahedral structure, pyroxene has a single chain structure, amphibole has a double chain structure, and biotite has a sheet structure). The series of minerals is called discontinuous because a series of different minerals is formed, each with a different crystal structure. The continuous reaction series involves the plagioclase feldspars. Plagioclase feldspars are an example of a "solid solution series", exhibiting gradations in chemical and physical properties. Chemically, this series consists of two "end members": 1. albite or Na plagioclase (NaAlSi3O8), the sodium "end member", and 2. anorthite or Ca plagioclase (CaAlSi2O8), the calcium "end member". There is a continuous chemical and physical gradation between the two end members. (Various plagioclase mineral names are given, based on the percentages of calcium and sodium present, including anorthite, bytownite, labradorite, andesine, oligoclase, and albite). Ca-plagioclase is the first to crystallize. It reacts with the melt to become more sodium rich. (If reaction is not complete, a zoned plagioclase crystal results which has a calcium-rich center and sodium-rich edges). This series of plagioclase minerals is called continuous because all of the plagioclase minerals have the same crystal structure. The minerals differ primarily in the proportions of calcium and sodium present. During the last stages of crystallization, potassium feldspar (KAlSi308) crystallizes. Muscovite may also form. If the remaining melt contains excess silica, quartz will crystallize.
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Bowen's Reaction Series helps us to understand why certain minerals tend to occur together in igneous rocks. For example, the mafic rocks, basalt and gabbro tend to contain olivine, pyroxene, and calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar. These are all minerals which crystallize at high temperatures. As another example, felsic or sialic rocks such as granite and rhyolite tend to contain quartz, potassium feldspar, sodium-rich plagioclase feldspar, and sometimes muscovite. These are minerals which crystallize at lower temperatures. The minerals that ultimately form are controlled by the initial composition of the magma. Bowen's Reaction Series also helps us to understand why certain minerals do NOT occur together in igneous rocks. For example, olivine and quartz are unlikely to occur in the same igneous rock, because olivine is a high temperature mineral, and quartz is a low temperature mineral. Bowen's Reaction Series also shows us that the range of igneous rocks, from ultramafic to sialic (or felsic), can be produced by the same original mafic magma. The magma changes as it cools. As a magma cools, the early-formed crystals may settle to the bottom of the magma chamber. This would produce a rock type at the bottom of the magma chamber that is dominated by early-formed minerals such as olivine, pyroxene, and calcic plagioclase (a mafic or ultramafic rock). The remaining melt would be enriched in silica (relative to its original composition), and may continue moving upward toward the earth's surface. Crystal settling may occur again, producing an intermediate rock. As the last remaining melt moves toward the Earth's surface, it will crystallize to produce a sialic or felsic rock. The removal of crystals from the magma by settling (or other processes) is known as fractional crystallization. The formation of several different rock types from one initial magma, through separation of earlier-formed crystals, causing the magma to evolve to become more silica-rich, is known as magmatic differentiation. Magmatic differentiation can produce a variety of types of igneous rocks through evolution of the original parent magma.
made up. I don't like it, but I remember it. Old People Are Bad; Keep Mother Quiet. Hopefully you can make up a better one. You have to know the series AND understand the concepts of how Bowen's Reaction Series relates to melting and to crystallization, and to the origin of igneous rocks of various composition.
Plutons
Subsurface igneous bodies Named for Pluto, Roman god of the underworld
Concordant Plutons Oriented parallel to surrounding layered rocks. Formed from magma that is injected between the layers of the surrounding rock.
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sill laccolith
Discordant Plutons Oriented at an angle to surrounding layered rocks. Magmas cut through the existing layering.
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dike - less than 1 cm (less than 0.5 inch) to 1 km (0.6 mi) stock - 1 km2 (less than 1 mi2) to 100 km2 (40 mi2) batholith - more than 100 km2 (40 mi2)
Xenoliths
When magma moves upward through pre-existing rocks, some of the surrounding rocks are melted and become assimilated into the magma. In other cases, blocks of the surrounding rocks are broken off and carried along by the magma, unmelted. These blocks are called xenoliths, a word meaning "foreign rocks". The rocks that make up the xenoliths would be carried along without melting if the temperature of the magma is not high enough to melt the rock (for example, if the minerals in the rock were higher on Bowen's reaction series).
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