Title: Intrusive and Extrusive Igneous Rock Structures
1Intrusive and Extrusive Igneous Rock Structures
Basalt dikes hosted in a granitoid pluton, with
metasediment roof pendant Wallowa Mts, Oregon
2Igneous Structures
- Intrusive (Plutonic)
- Magma cools slowly at depth
- Characteristic rock texture
- Characteristic structures
- Extrusive (Volcanic)
- Magma cools quickly at surface
- Characteristic rock textures
- Characteristic structures
3Igneous Structures
- Intrusive
- Batholith
- Stock
- Lopolith
- Laccolith
- Volcanic neck
- Sill
- Dike
- Extrusive
- Lava flow or plateau
- Volcano (many types)
- Crater
- Caldera
- Fissure
4Intrusive Igneous Structures
- Contacts (boundary between two rock bodies) can
be - Concordant
- Does not cross cut country rock (surrounding
rock) structure, bedding, or metamorphic fabric - Ex laccolith, sill
- Discordant
- Cross cuts country rock structure
- Ex dike, batholith, stock
5Intrusive Igneous Structures
- Categorized by depth of emplacement
6Intrusive Igneous Structures Large Scale
- Major scale intrusive bodies Plutons
- Batholith gt100 km2 in map area (usually
discordant) - Stock lt100 km2 in map area
- Lopolith dish-shaped layered intrusive rocks
(concordant)
7Intrusive Igneous StructuresIntermediate Scale
- Concordant intrusives
- Sill tabular shape
- Laccolith mushroom-shaped
- Roof pendant (remaining country rock)
- Discordant intrusives
- Dike tabular shape
- Volcanic neck cylindrical
8Intrusive Igneous Structures Small Scale
- Apophyses
- Irregular dikes extending from pluton
- Veins
- Tabular body filling a fracture (filled with 1-2
minerals) - Xenoliths
- Unrelated material in an igneous body
- Autoliths
- Genetically related inclusions (related igneous
material)
9Extrusive Igneous Structures
- Volcanism
- Directly observable petrologic process
- Redistributes heat and matter (rocks) from the
interior to the exterior of the earths surface - Occurs in oceanic continental settings
- Volcano
- Anywhere material reaches earths surface
10Extrusive Igneous Structures Scale
- Large scale structures
- Lava plateau (LIP flood basalt)
- Ignimbrite (ash flow tuff pyroclastic sheet)
- Intermediate scale structures
- Shield volcano
- Composite volcano (stratovolcano)
- Caldera, crater
- Lava flow or dome
- Small scale structures
- Tephra (pyroclastic material)
- Lava flow features
- Cinder cone
11Extrusive Igneous Structures Eruption Styles
- Effusive Eruptions
- Lava flows and domes
- Erupted from localized fissures or vents
- Generally low silica content (basalt, primitive
magma) - Explosive Eruptions
- Tephra (fragmental material)
- Pyroclastic falls or flows
- Erupted from vents
- Generally high silica content (felsic, recycled
magma) - Photo glossary of volcano terms
12Extrusive Igneous Structures Eruption Controls
- Two main controls on eruption style
- VISCOSITY
- A fluids resistance to flow
- Determined largely by fluid composition
- DISSOLVED GAS CONTENT
- Main magmatic gasses H2O, CO2, SO2 (or H2S)
- At high pressure, gasses are dissolved in the
magma - At low pressure (near surface), gasses form a
vapor, expand, and rise boiling - Interaction controls eruption style
- Gas bubbles rise and escape from low viscosity
magma EFFUSIVE ERUPTION - Gas bubbles are trapped in high viscosity magma
increase of pressure EXPLOSIVE ERUPTION
13Extrusive Igneous Structures Eruption Controls
- Two main controls on eruption style
- VISCOSITY and DISSOLVED GAS CONTENT
- In general, both viscosity and gas content are
related to magma composition - High silica content gt higher viscosity, more
dissolved gas - Low silica content gt lower viscosity, less
dissolved gas
14Types of Volcanic Products Effusive
- Lava Flow
- Dominantly basalt (low viscosity and gas)
- Thin and laterally extensive sheets
- Pahoehoe flows smooth, ropey flows
- Aa or block flows rough and irregular flows
- Baked zones oxidized zones due to contact with
high temperature lava flow
- Lava Dome
- Dacite or rhyolite (high viscosity, low gas
content) - Thick,steep-sidedflows
15Types of Volcanic Products Explosive
- Pyroclastic particles
- Fragmental volcanic material (TEPHRA)
- Vitric (glass shards)
- Crystals
- Lithic (volcanic rock fragments)
- Broken during eruption of magma
- Typically higher silica, high gas content
- Categorized by size
- Ash (lt 2.0 mm)
- Lapilli (2-64 mm)
- Blocks and bombs (gt64 mm)
16Types of Volcanic Products Explosive
- Pyroclastic fall (mainly Ash fall)
- Material ejected directly from volcano (fallout,
air fall) - Ash, lapilli (pumice, scoria), blocks, and bombs
- Sorted (small particles carried further)
- Laterally extensive, mantles topography
- Pyroclastic flow (nueé ardante or ignimbrite)
- Fast moving, high density flow of hot ash,
crystals, blocks, and/or pumice - Follow topographic lows
- Can be hot enough after deposition to weld, fuse
vitric fragments
17Types of Volcanic Products Explosive
- Hydroclastic Products
- Water-magma interaction (phreatomagmatic) causes
explosive fragmentation - Typically basaltic lavas
- Any water-magma interaction (sea floor, caldera
lake, groundwater)
- Great volumes of hydroclastics on the sea floor
and in the edifice of submarine volcanoes - Highly subject to alteration gt clay minerals,
microcrystalline silica, and zeolite
18Styles of Volcanic Eruption Effusive
- Lava Plateaus and Flood Basalts (LIPs)
- Generally low viscosity, low gas content effusive
lava flows (basalt) - Hot spot and continental rift settings
- Great areal extent and enormous individual flows
- Erupted from fissures
- Examples (no modern)
- Columbia River Basalt Group
- Deccan Traps
19Styles of Volcanic Eruption Effusive
- Shield volcanoes
- Generally low viscosity, low gas content effusive
lava flows (basalt) - Hot spot and continental rift settings
- Central vent and surrounding broad, gentle
sloping volcanic edifice
- Repeated eruption of mainly thin, laterally
extensive lava flows - Modern examples
- Mauna Loa, Kiluaea (Hawaii)
- Krafla (Iceland)
- Erta Ale (Ethiopia)
20Styles of Volcanic Eruption Effusive
- Submarine eruptions and pillow lava
- Generally low viscosity, low gas content effusive
lava flows (basalt) - Divergent margin (mid-ocean ridge) settings
- Produces rounded pillows of lava with glassy
outer rind - Can produce abundant hydroclastic material
(shallow) - Modern examples
- Loihi, Hawaii
21Styles of Volcanic Eruption Explosive
- Cinder cone
- Generally low viscosity, high gas content
(basalt) - Subduction zone settings (also continental rifts
and continental hot spots)
- Small, steep sided pile of loose tephra (mainly
lapilli, blocks, and bombs) - Scoria or cinder
- Often form on larger volcanoes (shield or
stratovolcano) - Modern example
- Parícutin, Mexico
22Styles of Volcanic Eruption Explosive
- Composite cones and Stratovolcanoes
- Generally higher viscosity, high gas content
(andesites) - Dominantly subduction zone settings
Mayon Volcano Philippines
- Composed of layers of loose pyroclastic material
(fallout and flows) and minor lava flows, some
shallow intrusions - Form from multiple eruptions over hundreds to
thousands of years - Examples
- Mt. St. Helens, Mt. Rainier (USA)
- Pinatubo (Indonesia)
23Styles of Volcanic Eruption Explosive
- Calderas and pyroclastic sheet (ignimbrite)
deposits - Generally high viscosity, high gas content
(rhyolite) - Subduction zone and continental hot spots
Crater Lake, Oregon
- Form by collapse of volcano following evacuation
of the magma chamber - Often produce widespread ash, ignimbrite
(pyroclastic flow) - Examples
- Krakatoa, Indonesia (modern example)
- Crater Lake, Yellowstone (USA)
24Volcanic Hazards
- 500 million people live in high hazard regions
- Eruptions and hazards are largely predictable
- Main hazards
- Tephra (mainly ash)
- Lava flows
- Pyroclastic flows
- Lahar
- Avalanche/landslide
- Volcanic gas
- Tsunami
- Climate change