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Chapter 6: Igneous Rocks

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Title: Chapter 6: Igneous Rocks Author: Guest Last modified by: Instructor Created Date: 5/4/2006 4:37:49 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 6: Igneous Rocks


1
Chapter 6
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What are igneous rocks?
  • Igneous rocks gets its name from the Latin word
    for fire, because it is formed from hot molten
    rock (magma) inside the Earth. When the molten
    rock solidifies, it forms solid igneous rock.
  • The way the magma cools determines the kind of
    igneous rock that is formed.
  • Magma is molten rock, while lava is magma on the
    Earths surface.
  • Igneous rocks may be either extrusive if they
    form at the surface (ex. basalt) or intrusive if
    magma solidifies underground (ex. granite).

Watch Video
3
From Minerals to Rocks
4
Igneous Rock Textures
  • Texture refers to a rocks appearance with
    respect to the size, shape and arrangement of its
    grains.
  • Extrusive rocks are typically fine-grained
    (grains smaller than 1mm). The grains are small
    because the magma cooled rapidly at the surface,
    and large crystals did not have time to form.
    Some intrusive rocks are fine grained, but these
    would have formed near the surface in cold
    rock.

Extrusive rock called obsidian. This is a
glass-like rock that forms at the surface
5
Igneous Rock Textures
  • Intrusive rocks usually form at considerable
    depth (more than a few km) and are called
    plutonic rocks (after Pluto, the Roman god of the
    underworld).
  • Intrusive rocks are typically coarse-grained
    (bigger than 1mm) because of the slow cooling and
    solidification of magma

6
How are igneous rocks classified?
  • Igneous rocks names are based on texture
    (basically grain-size) and mineral composition.
  • So, each type of igneous rock will have
  • 1. a specific combination of minerals.
  • 2. coarse or fine grains.
  • Plutonic rocks are easier to identify because of
    the larger crystals.

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Common Igneous RocksGroup 1
Granite Rhyolite
Formed inside Earth Formed at surface
Coarse-grained Fine-grained
Quartz crystals visible Crystals too small
Feldspars Feldspars
8
Common Igneous RocksGroup 2
Diorite Andesite
Formed inside Earth Formed at surface
Coarse-grained Fine-grained
No quartz Crystals too small to see
Feldspars 30-50 ferromagnesian minerals Feldspars 30-50 ferromagnesian minerals
9
Common Igneous RocksGroup 3
Gabbro Basalt
Formed inside Earth Formed at surface
Coarse-grained Fine-grained
Mostly ferromagnesian minerals Mostly ferromagnesian minerals
Some feldspars Some feldspars
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Identification of Igneous Rocks
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Occurrences of Igneous Rock
Occurrence
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What happens when magma cools underground?
  • Cooling magma may form intrusive structures, or
    bodies of magma that crystallize/harden after
    flooding surrounding rock layers

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Examples of Intrusive Structures
  • 1. Volcanic neck (magma is solidified in the neck
    of a volcano)
  • 2. Dike Sills (magma solidifies into a wall
    after being squeezed through two rock layers)
  • Ex. Ship Rock in New Mexico, USA

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Shiprock, New Mexico
Volcanic neck
Dike
Shiprock Video (420 mark)
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Dikes Sills
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Examples of Intrusive Structures (contd)
  • Plutons are blobs of magma that crystallize
    within the crust. If these plutons make it to
    the surface, large areas of rock (usually
    granite) form huge outcrops of rock at the
    surface. Batholiths are areas of plutons greater
    than 100km2. Batholiths are present in the Sierra
    Nevada Mountains of California and in the
    Appalachian Mountains

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Halifax Pluton, South Mountain Batholith, Nova
Scotia
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Batholith Formation
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Examples of Extrusive Structures
  • The most obvious structures made of extrusive
    igneous rock (or igneous rock at the surface)
    are
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