Geology lesson 7 Igneous rocks
A melt forms when solid materials become hot and transform into liquid
molten rock is a type of melt
magma is molten rock beneath the earths surface - underground melt
lava is molten rock that has flowed out onto the earths surface
igneous rocks are made by the freezing or crystallization of a melt
obsidian- sharpest thing on the planet
obsidian is an extrusive igneous rock - no crystals
igneous rocks form through the cooling and solidification of magma or lava
igneous rocks can either form below the surface or on the surface
below the surface creates intrusive plutonic rocks where you can see the crystals
on the surface creates extrusive volcanic rocks where you can’t see the crystals
granite is an intrusive igneous rock
the outer core is made of mostly iron and nickel
earth’s crust and mantle are primarily composed of solid rock
magma is generated in the uppermost mantle
greatest amounts of magma are produced at divergent plate boundaries (seafloor spreading)
lesser amounts of magma is produced at subduction zones (convergent plate boundaries involving the subduction of oceanic crust)
the geothermal gradient is when temperatures in the upper crust increase about 25 degrees C per km
rocks in the lower crust and upper mantle are near BUT NOT AT their melting points
peridotite is an intrusive ultramafic igneous rock found in the mantle
3 Ways to generate magma:
decompression melting- rapid decrease in pressure can cause the mantle to melt, even without an increase temperature (mid ocean ridges, continental rifts, mantle plumes/hot spots
addition of volatiles- volatiles are chemical compounds that lower the melting temperature of the rock (subduction zones)
addition of heat - induces melting if temperature exceeds melting temperature (mantle plumes/hot spots
decompression melting: if the pressure affecting hot mantle rock decreases while the temperature remains unchanged, magma forms
Decompression- melting due to a decrease in pressure
Because pressure prevents melting, a decrease in pressure can permit melting
Three environments where decompression melting occurs: mantle plume/hot spot, continental rift, mid-ocean ridge
Melting crust forms rhyolitic magma
basaltic magma heats the crust
Addition of heat induces melting if temperature exceeds melting temperature
gases/volatiles give magmas their explosive character
Water vapor (h2o) is the most abundant volcanic gas
felsic/rhyolitic magmas are the most explosive
Bowen’s reaction series:
minerals crystallize in a systematic fashion based on their melting points
as minerals crystalize, composition of the liquid portion of the magma continually changes
assimilation- magma incorporates some of the surrounding rock
magma mixing- the more buoyant mass may overtake the slower rising body
environment in which magma cools and completely solidifies to form a rock determines- type of rock (composition), appearance of the rock as seen in its texture, and type of rock body
extrusive or volcanic igneous rocks- magma erupts onto surface, lower temps, rapid cooling
intrusive or plutonic igneous rocks- magma is below surface, high temps, slow cooling
explosive extrusive eruptions- high gas content and high viscosity, gas bubbles build pressure, the bubbles burst at low pressure of the surface, when the bubbles burst the magma fragments into pyroclasts and tephra ash
non explosive (effusive) extrusive eruptions- low gas and low viscosity magmas, begin with fire fountains, produces lava flows on surface, produce pillow lavas if erupted beneath water
main types of intrusive environments- dike, still, laccolith, pluton
igneous dike example- grand canyon at Hance rapids
A melt forms when solid materials become hot and transform into liquid
molten rock is a type of melt
magma is molten rock beneath the earths surface - underground melt
lava is molten rock that has flowed out onto the earths surface
igneous rocks are made by the freezing or crystallization of a melt
obsidian- sharpest thing on the planet
obsidian is an extrusive igneous rock - no crystals
igneous rocks form through the cooling and solidification of magma or lava
igneous rocks can either form below the surface or on the surface
below the surface creates intrusive plutonic rocks where you can see the crystals
on the surface creates extrusive volcanic rocks where you can’t see the crystals
granite is an intrusive igneous rock
the outer core is made of mostly iron and nickel
earth’s crust and mantle are primarily composed of solid rock
magma is generated in the uppermost mantle
greatest amounts of magma are produced at divergent plate boundaries (seafloor spreading)
lesser amounts of magma is produced at subduction zones (convergent plate boundaries involving the subduction of oceanic crust)
the geothermal gradient is when temperatures in the upper crust increase about 25 degrees C per km
rocks in the lower crust and upper mantle are near BUT NOT AT their melting points
peridotite is an intrusive ultramafic igneous rock found in the mantle
3 Ways to generate magma:
decompression melting- rapid decrease in pressure can cause the mantle to melt, even without an increase temperature (mid ocean ridges, continental rifts, mantle plumes/hot spots
addition of volatiles- volatiles are chemical compounds that lower the melting temperature of the rock (subduction zones)
addition of heat - induces melting if temperature exceeds melting temperature (mantle plumes/hot spots
decompression melting: if the pressure affecting hot mantle rock decreases while the temperature remains unchanged, magma forms
Decompression- melting due to a decrease in pressure
Because pressure prevents melting, a decrease in pressure can permit melting
Three environments where decompression melting occurs: mantle plume/hot spot, continental rift, mid-ocean ridge
Melting crust forms rhyolitic magma
basaltic magma heats the crust
Addition of heat induces melting if temperature exceeds melting temperature
gases/volatiles give magmas their explosive character
Water vapor (h2o) is the most abundant volcanic gas
felsic/rhyolitic magmas are the most explosive
Bowen’s reaction series:
minerals crystallize in a systematic fashion based on their melting points
as minerals crystalize, composition of the liquid portion of the magma continually changes
assimilation- magma incorporates some of the surrounding rock
magma mixing- the more buoyant mass may overtake the slower rising body
environment in which magma cools and completely solidifies to form a rock determines- type of rock (composition), appearance of the rock as seen in its texture, and type of rock body
extrusive or volcanic igneous rocks- magma erupts onto surface, lower temps, rapid cooling
intrusive or plutonic igneous rocks- magma is below surface, high temps, slow cooling
explosive extrusive eruptions- high gas content and high viscosity, gas bubbles build pressure, the bubbles burst at low pressure of the surface, when the bubbles burst the magma fragments into pyroclasts and tephra ash
non explosive (effusive) extrusive eruptions- low gas and low viscosity magmas, begin with fire fountains, produces lava flows on surface, produce pillow lavas if erupted beneath water
main types of intrusive environments- dike, still, laccolith, pluton
igneous dike example- grand canyon at Hance rapids