ET

Geology Ch. 6 Notes + Flashcards

6.1-6.4 Wednesday

6.6-6.7 Friday

No class next friday

Read chapter 9

Igneous Rocks

What is a Rock?

  1. Solid

  2. Generally composed of minerals

  3. Formed through specific processes

  • Igneous rocks → “born of fire”, forms when molten minerals solidify

  • Intergrown minerals in thin sections

  • Creation of rock → 50-250km, >800 degrees C below the surface

  • Heath, pressure, fluids, mineral

  • Undergoes decompression melting underground

  • Radioactive decay, friction, and residual are the 3 main types of heat

  • Heat → Geothermal gradient (15-50 C/km)

  • Felsic (continental) rocks: made from more silica

  • Mafic (ocean.) rocks: made from less silica

  • Sedimentary rock → lithified sediments, form when rock debris transported by the agents of erosion solidify

  • Grains held together by cement in thin section

  • Metamorphic rocks → “changed form”, form when pre-existing rock is exposed to excessive heat and pressure

  • Grains with parallel alignment in thin sections

  • Mafic Volcanoes

  • Non Viscous lava; spreads out in a thin sheet

  • Dark

  • Forms at oceanic crust

  • Felsic Volcanoes

  • Viscous lava; forms thick, dome-like blob

  • Magma: changes in composition

  • Fractional Crystallization: Magma starts out as mafic cools and the magma that doesn’t cool yet have silica, making it felsic

  • Assimilation:

    • Xenoliths: Wall rock embedded in igneous rock

  • Rise of magma

  • Density: Magma in the mantle is more dense than rock

  • Pressure flows up

  • Gas expands, propelling the magma up more

  • Magma is likely to stop before it gets to the crust

  • Cooling of Magma

  • The deeper magma cools, the larger the crystals

  • The closer magma is to the surface, the faster it cools, producing smaller crystals

  • Intrusive (plutonic, below the surface)

  • Cools quickly

  • Large crystals

  • Phaneritic (visible) crystals

  • Most activity is intrusive

  • Extrusive (volcanic, outside the surface)

  • Cools slowly

  • Small crystals

  • Aphanitic (without) crystals

Major Types of Igneous Rocks

  • Vesicular: rock is full of vesicles, air pockets

  • Ex: Pumice, Scoria

  • Glassy: Happens when lava flows into the water

  • Ex: obsidian

  • Pyroclastic: broken pieces of ash from a volcanic eruption

  • Ex: Tuff

Igneous Rock Structures

  • Sill

  • Forms horizontally

  • Dike

  • Forms vertically

  • Batholith

  • An extremely large area of granite rock

  • Ex: Sierra Nevada batholith

  • Pillow Basalt

  • Bulbus structures that cool from the outside instantly, creating a glass structure on the outside