Title: GEOL 206 Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics
1GEOL 206Earthquakes, Volcanoes and Plate
Tectonics
- Prof. Chris DeVries
- Fall 2006
2Minerals
- Formal definition
- Minerals must
- be crystalline solids
- occur naturally
- be of definite chemical composition
- be inorganic
3Crystalline Solids?
Eg. Halite, NaCl (table salt) Cubic arrangement
of Na (red) and Cl- (yellow) ions Halite
crystals are cubic in shape.
4Definite Chemical Composition?
- An analysis of the mineral will always produce
the same ratio of elements. - E.g. if you analysed NaCl, you would find a 11
ratio of sodium to chlorine, always. - E.g. if you analysed 2 different crystals of
(Mg,Fe)2SiO4 (the mineral olivine), where Mg and
Fe can substitute for each other in the
structure, the ratio of Mg Fe to Si would be
21 in both crystals.
5Inorganic?
- Organic compounds are those that contain carbon
and hydrogen and are made by living organisms. - Some organisms can make minerals
- E.g. shell-building organisms, shells of calcite
or aragonite (CaCO3). Calcite is inorganic. - Amber (petrified tree sap) is NOT technically a
mineral, as it is organic.
6Silicate Minerals
- Most common igneous minerals
- Form four major different structures based on the
silicate tetrahedron (SiO44-) - To form stable minerals silicate tetrahedra
- Charge-balance with positively-charged ions
- Share oxygen atoms with other tetrahedra
7Form 1 Isolated silicate structure
- Single tetrahedra joined by positively charged
ions - E.g. olivine ((Mg,Fe)2SiO4)
Individual SiO44- tetrahedra joined by Mg2 and
Fe2 ions (green balls)
8Form 2 Chain structures
- Single or double chains of tetrahedra joined by
positively-charged ions
Augite (a pyroxene) is a single-chain silicate
mineral
Single and double chains of silicate tetrahedra
9Form 3 Sheet structures
- Sheets of silicate tetrahedra joined together by
positively-charged ions
A sheet silicate
Mica is a sheet silicate
10Form 4 Framework structure
- A framework structure contains silicate
tetrahedra joined in a 3-dimensional array - Quartz (below), SiO2 is the best example of a
framework silicate
11Rocks
- Made up of minerals
- Igneous Rocks
- Formed from solidifying magma
- Sedimentary Rocks
- Formed from the lithification (compaction and
dehydration) of sediments in oceans and lakes - Metamorphic Rocks
- High pressure and/or high temperature serve to
re-crystallise igneous, sedimentary or existing
metamorphic rocks in a process called
metamorphism - Contain same chemical elements in same ratios as
original rock - Water and other fluids can be lost or added
however - Contain different mineral assemblages than the
parent rock
12The Rock Cycle
13Question There are a few (I wont say how many)
arrows missing from this rock cycle
representation, and perhaps one box. Add them in!
14A more complete cycle!
Shell-forming marine organisms
15Classifying Igneous Rocks
- Common to classify igneous rocks based on their
silica content - Felsic rocks have a high (gt65) SiO2 content
- (fel feldspar, a common mineral, sic silica)
- Mafic rocks have a low (50) SiO2 content
- (ma magnesium, f ferric, referring to Fe
iron) - Intermediate rocks have a SiO2 content between
felsic and mafic - Ultramafic rocks have very low (lt45) SiO2
content - Rule of thumb
- The darker an igneous rock is, the less silica it
has - There are exceptions!
16Intrusive vs. Extrusive
- Igneous classification based on whether the rock
solidified below ground, or erupted from a
volcano - Intrusive rocks tend to be coarser-grained as
they cool very slowly underground, giving
crystals time to form - Plutons vs. dikes vs. sills (see diagram)
- Extrusive rocks are usually fine-grained, often
so that you cannot even see individual crystals,
as they solidify in minutes to hours. - Any crystals that you do find in extrusive rocks
will usually have formed before eruption
17The major igneous rock types
Intrusive
Extrusive
Felsic
Mafic
In the volcano section, these terms will be
revisited in greater detail