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Igneous Rocks
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Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Dec 16, 2015

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Dominik Morton
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Page 1: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Igneous Rocks

Page 2: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Igneous rocks

• Form from “magma” (molten rock)

• “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO2)

• Magma that crystallizes before reaching the surface forms an intrusive (plutonic) rock

• Lava crystallizes to form an extrusive (volcanic) rock

Page 3: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Intrusive igneous rocks• Cool slowly• Crystals grow larger• Texture is phaneritic (lit. “visible grains”)• Must give a grain size:

– Visible but less than 1 mm = fine grained (f.g.)– Between 1 and 5 mm = medium grained (m.g.)– Greater then 5 mm = coarse grained (c.g.)– Greater than 2 cm = pegmatitic (see below)

• Don’t have to give “phaneritic”

Page 4: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Extrusive igneous rocks

• Cool rapidly• Crystals are small (generally too small to

see) • Texture is aphanitic (lit. not visible grains)

• Where lava cools very quickly (quenches) the rock will be a glass (non-crystalline)

• Textural term is glassy

Page 5: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Cooling rates and texture

Page 6: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Aphanitic texture

Page 7: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Phaneritic texture

Page 8: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Porphyritic rocks• When magma cooling rate changes the rock will

commonly have two different grain sizes• Term used is porphyritic• The larger grains are phenocrysts which sit in a

groundmass• Must indicate the grain size of the groundmass

(aphanitic, phaneritic or (rarely) glassy) to denote complete texture– e.g., f.g. porphyritic, aphanitic porphyritic, etc.

Page 9: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Origin of porphyritic texture

Page 10: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Porphyritic texture

Page 11: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Porphyritic textures

Phenocrysts

Groundmass(aphanitic)

Page 12: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Porphyritic textures

Phenocrysts

Groundmass(phaneritic)

Page 13: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Other textural terms• Volcanic rocks commonly have bubble

holes (vesicles) caused by escaping gas. Texture is vesicular

• Use different terms for light or dark coloured vesicular rocks.– Light coloured vesicular rocks generally have

many tiny holes. Texture is pumaceous, rock is pumice.

– Dark coloured vesicular rocks have fewer and larger holes. Texture is scoriaceous, rock is scoria.

Page 14: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Pumice

Scoria

Page 15: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Other special (textural) terms• Amygdaloidal: textural term used when vesicles

have became filled with minerals deposited from solutions percolating through the rock

• Tuff is a pyroclastic rock formed from volcanic fragments (ash)

• Obsidian is a volcanic glass• Pegmatite is an intrusive rock with very large

grains (cm size) – typically due to crystallisation from water-rich magma. Texture is pegmatitic

Page 16: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Determining texture

Page 17: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Determining texture

Page 18: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Determining texture

1 cm

Page 19: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Composition

• Rocks are named according to the composition (proportion of minerals). The proportion of dark Fe-Mg (ferromagnesian) minerals is an important criterion

• Felsic rocks contain less than 10% Fe-Mg mins.• Intermediate rocks 10-30, 30-40% Fe-Mg mins.• Mafic rocks have 40-90% Fe-Mg mins.• Ultramafic rocks have >90% Fe-Mg mins.

Page 20: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Composition

Amphibole

IntermediateFelsicType of magma

Granite

Rhyolite Dacite

Granodiorite

Page 21: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.
Page 22: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

F(elsic), I(intermediate), M(afic), U(ltramafic)

• Is the rock felsic, intermediate, mafic, or ultramafic? – Determined on the basis of percentage Fe-Mg minerals

– Chart gives ranges of % Fe-Mg minerals.

– In general one can associate % Fe-Mg mins with colour. The darker the rock, the higher the % Fe-Mg minerals.

– Relatively easy to determine for phaneritic rocks

– With aphanitic rocks must go entirely on colour: felsic rocks are buff, pink or red (felsic glass, obsidian, is black); intermediate rocks vary from shades of grey to green; mafic rocks are dark green or grey to black.

Page 23: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Name of the feldspar

• Name the feldspar. Two choices:– K-feldspar (pink, cream)– Plagioclase (white, grey or blue), striations on

cleavage surfaces– Note that in aphanitic rocks you may not be

able to see any feldspar (too fine grained). Therefore report feldspar as n.d. = not determined. This is not the same as saying there is none.

– Glassy rocks have no minerals, i.e. no feldspar

Page 24: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Fe-Mg mineral• Name the Fe-Mg mineral(s). • There are four choices:

– Biotite (usually in felsic rocks)– Amphibole (predominant in intermediate rocks)– Pyroxene (in mafic and ultramafic rocks)– Olivine (in mafic and ultramafic rocks)– Note: In the aphanitic rocks you may not be

able to see the Fe-Mg mineral. Report n.d. (not determined)

– Glassy rocks have no Fe-Mg minerals.

Page 25: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Identifying the Fe-Mg minerals

• Biotite: Black, shiny, flakey

• Amphibole: Black/dark green, shiny (visible cleavage surfaces), not flakey

• Pyroxene: Black/dark green, dull (cleavage not readily visible), not flakey

• Olivine, apple green, glassy

Page 26: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

% quartz• Give the percentage quartz

– In phaneritic rocks this is relatively easy; quartz is the grey vitreous (glassy-looking) mineral

– Note that % quartz varies inversely with the amount of Fe-Mg mineral.

• Felsic rock contain significant amount of quartz and a little Fe-Mg mineral (biotite usually)

• Mafic or ultramafic rocks little or no quartz and lots of Fe-Mg mineral (pyroxene and/olivine)

– In aphanitic rocks report “n.d.” not 0%– Obsidian has no minerals (i.e. 0% quartz).

Page 27: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

I(ntrusive) or E(xtrusive)

• Is the rock intrusive (I) or extrusive (E)?– Rule of thumb: phaneritic rocks are intrusive,

aphanitic or glassy rocks are extrusive– Except, basalts (mafic extrusive) are

commonly fine grained (phaneritic)

Page 28: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Name• Use:

– the charts (on handout), – examples (at back of lab),– poster (back of lab, this powerpoint file), – book.

• Note that the name is, in some respects, the least important column of this lab.

• This lab is your first introduction to igneous rocks and it is far more important to become familiar with them than to name them.

Page 29: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.
Page 30: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Microscopes and pumice

• Look through microscopes at slides

• Answer questions.

• DON’T MOVE THE SLIDES

• Don’t confuse colourless and transparent…

• With pumice “experiment” think of density – as a whole.

Page 31: Igneous Rocks. Igneous rocks Form from “magma” (molten rock) “Lava” is magma that reaches the surface and looses gas (mostly water and CO 2 ) Magma that.

Questions?