Rocks and the Rock Cycle
Rocks and
the Rock Cycle
Classifying Rocks
By: •Texture •Grain size •Shape•Patterns •Mineral Composition
Texture•The look and feel of the rock’s surface.
•Rough, chalky, smooth or glassy.
Grain Size
• The size of the actual grain in the rock.
• They are fined-grained, coarse-grained, or no visible grains.
Grain Shape
•Is the way a grain looks on a rock.
Grain Pattern
•The patterns of the grains form are wavy, swirling, or like a stack of planks.
•Some rocks have no visible grains even under a microscope.
Mineral Composition
•Will show the mineral composition in the rocks.
•Minerals are found by a series of tests.
Types of Rocks
There are three major types: • Igneous – a type of rock formed
from the cooling of lava. •Sedimentary – a type of rock
that forms when sediments are compacted.
•Metamorphic – forms when existing rocks are changed by heat and pressure.
Igneous Rocks
•Classified according to their origin, texture, and mineral composition.
•Extrusive rocks – igneous rocks formed from lava that erupted onto the Earth’s surface.
•Basalt is the most common extrusive rock.
Igneous Rocks
• Intrusive Rocks –formed when magma hardened under the Earth.
• Granite is most abundant intrusive rock in the continental crust.
• Granite forms the core of many mountain ranges.
Igneous Rocks
•Basalt is an extrusive rock. •Magma that is high in silica usually forms lighted colored rocks such as granite.
•Many igneous rocks are hard, dense and durable.
Igneous Rock Texture • Depends on the size and shape
of the mineral crystals. • Maybe glassy, coarse-grained,
or porphyritic. • Intrusive rocks have large
grains.• Slow cooling magma forms
coarse-grained rocks. • Extrusive rocks have a fine-
grained or glassy texture.
• Rapid cooling lava forms fine grained rocks.
Igneous Rock Texture• Porphyritic rocks have both
fine-grains and large crystals scattered throughout.
• Porphyritic rocks form when intrusive rocks form in 2 stages.
• Magma begins to cool slowly making large crystals while the other materials around it cool quickly making a fine grained background.
Sedimentary Rocks
What is it ? •Rocks formed from particles
deposited by water and wind. •Sediments are small pieces of
material that come from rocks or living things.
•Sediments may include shells, bones, leaves, stems, and other remains of living things.
Erosion and Deposition
•Wind, water, and ice can carry sediment and deposit it in layers.
•Erosion breaks up rocks. •Deposition is the process by which sediment settles out of the water or wind.
Compaction and Cementation
• Compaction and cementation over millions of years, thick layers of sediment build up Compaction is the process that presses sediments together. New layers help compact layers underneath. While being compacted minerals slowly dissolve in the water. Minerals seep into spaces between particles of sediment. This is called sedimentation.
Types•There are 3 major groups of
sedimentary rocks.•Clastic forms when rock fragment
are squeezed together. •Organic forms from remains of
plants and animals. •Chemical form when minerals are
dissolved in a solution crystallize.
Uses•Sandstone and limestone have been used as building materials. Limestone is also important when smelting iron ore.
Metamorphic Rock
What is a Metamorphic Rock?
• Any rock that can be changed into a metamorphic rock by heat and pressure.
• Can change from igneous, sedimentary, and other metamorphic rocks.
• The deeper the rock in the Earth the more heat and pressure.
How to classify a Metamorphic Rock?
• Geologists classify metamorphic rocks by the arrangement of the grains that make up the rocks.
• Metamorphic rocks have their grains in bands said to be foliated.
• Metamorphic rocks without bands are called nonfoliated.
Metamorphic Rocks
•Most of metamorphic rocks are extremely hard.
•Some examples are slate, gneiss and quartzite which come from shale, granite, and sandstone.
Metamorphic Rocks
•Metamorphic rocks can be sued for many different things.
•The Taj Mahal in India is made from the metamorphic rock marble.
•Chalkboards, flooring, roofing, walkways are created from slate, which comes in different colors.
Metamorphic Rocks
•Heat and pressure deep beneath the Earth’s surface can change any rock into metamorphic rocks.
Rock Cycle•Forces with in the Earth build, destroy, and change rocks. The different paths a rock can take form the Rock Cycle.
Processes within the Rock Cycle
•Erosion•Melting•Heat and Pressure
MeltingErosion
Rock Cycle and Plate Tectonics
•Rock Cycle is driven by Plate Movement
•Plates press rocks into the mantle, forming magma.
•Plate movement creates the heat and pressure required for the formation of metamorphic rock.