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IGNEOUS ROCKS

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IGNEOUS ROCKS



Formation and characteristics

IGNEOUS

The term igneous is from the Latin

word “ignis" which means FIRE.





When most people think about igneous

rocks they imagine a volcano erupting

ash and lava. Igneous rocks are

produced this way but most igneous

rocks are produced deep underground by

the cooling and hardening of magma.

Magma is molten (melted) rock under

the surface of the Earth. It is produced

in the upper parts of the mantle or in the

lowest areas of the crust usually at a

depth of 50 to 200 kilometres.

This diagram

shows where

magma is

produced at

a subduction

zone.







MAGMA is less dense than the surrounding rock

which causes it to rise.

When magma reaches the surface it is then called

LAVA and the eruptions of lava and ash produce

volcanoes.

When lava reaches the surface of the Earth through

volcanoes or through great fissures the rocks that are

formed from the lava cooling and hardening are called

EXTRUSIVE or VOLCANIC IGNEOUS ROCKS.

Some of the more common types of extrusive igneous

rocks are lava rocks, cinders, pumice, obsidian, and

volcanic ash and dust.

This diagram shows a

large intrusive igneous

body called a batholith.

A batholith is the largest

of the intrusive bodies.

They are larger than 100

square kilometres and

usually form granite cores.







• Millions and even billions of years ago molten rock

was cooling and thus hardening into igneous rocks

deep under the surface of the Earth.

• These rocks are now visible because mountain

building has thrust them upward and erosion has

removed the softer rocks exposing the much

harder igneous rocks.

• These are called INTRUSIVE or PLUTONIC

IGNEOUS ROCKS because the magma has intruded

into pre-existing rock layers. Types of intrusive

igneous rocks are granite and basalt.

The composition of igneous rocks falls into

categories determined by the amount of

silica (SiO2) that the rocks contain – the less

silica, the darker the rock. The four main

categories are acidic, intermediate, basic

and ultrabasic.









Acidic rocks have a high silica content (65% or

more) along with a relatively high amount of

sodium and potassium.

These rocks are composed of the minerals

quartz and feldspar.

RHYOLITE and GRANITE are the two most

common types of acidic rock.

The composition of igneous rocks

falls into categories determined by

the amount of silica (SiO2) that the

rocks contain. The four main

categories are acidic, intermediate,

basic and ultrabasic.



INTERMEDIATE ROCK

Andesite Diorite









• Intermediate rocks contain between 53% and 65%

silica.

• They also contain potassium and feldspar with a small

amount of quartz.

• DIORITE and ANDESITE are the two most common

types of intermediate rock.

The composition of igneous rocks

falls into categories determined by

the amount of silica (SiO2) that the

rocks contain. The four main

categories are acidic, intermediate,

basic and ultrabasic.









• Basic rocks are composed of less than 52% silica and

a large amount of feldspar and very rarely quartz.

• The two most common types of basic rocks are

BASALTS and GABBROS.

The composition of igneous rocks falls into

categories determined by the amount of

silica (SiO2) that the rocks contain. The

four main categories are acidic,

intermediate, basic and ultrabasic.



ULTRABASIC ROCK

Peridotite









• Ultrabasic rocks are composed of less than 45% silica and

contain no quartz or feldspar.

• They are composed mainly of a dense iron and magnesia

mineral called olivine and the mineral pyroxene.

• The most common ultrabasic rock is PERIDOTITE. It is a dark

green, coarse-grained igneous rock that many scientists

believe is the main rock of the mantle.

The most

widespread

igneous rock





Basalts are dark coloured, fine-grained extrusive rock.

The mineral grains are so fine that they are

impossible to distinguish with the naked eye or even a

magnifying glass.

They are the most widespread of all the igneous

rocks.

Most basalts are volcanic in origin and were formed

by the rapid cooling and hardening of the lava flows.

Some basalts are intrusive having cooled inside the

Earth's interior.

This is a vertical columnar basalt

formation.

When basaltic lava cools it often forms

hexagonal (six sided) columns.

Some famous examples of columnar basalt

formations are the Giant's Causeway in

Northern Ireland (bottom left) and the

Devil’s Postpile National Monument in

California (bottom right).









Giant’s Causeway

SCORIA









Scoria is a type of basalt that's full of bubble

holes. The bubbles formed as the lava was blasted

out of a volcano, and were trapped as the lava cooled

and hardened.

The bubble holes are often uniform in size and shape.

Despite all the holes, scoria doesn't float in water.

Scoria can be black, dark gray, or red.

PUMICE

the rock

that floats



PUMICE is a very light coloured, frothy volcanic rock.

Pumice is formed from lava that is full of gas. The

lava is ejected and shot through the air during an

eruption. As the lava hurtles through the air it cools

and the gases escape leaving the rock full of holes.

Pumice is so light that it actually floats on water.

Huge pumice blocks have been seen floating on the

ocean after large eruptions. Some lava blocks are

large enough to carry small animals.

Pumice is ground up and used today in soaps,

abrasive cleaners, and also in polishes.

RHYOLITE



• RHYOLITE is very closely related to granite. The

difference is rhyolite has much finer crystals.

• These crystals are so small that they can not be seen

by the naked eye.

• Rhyolite is an extrusive igneous rock having cooled

much more rapidly than granite giving it a glassy

appearance.

• The minerals that make up rhyolite are quartz,

feldspar, mica, and hornblende.

GRANITE

Granite is one of the most common igneous

rocks. Many headstones are made of granite.

You can't scratch granite with a nail or knife.

Some broken surfaces have flat surfaces that

shine in sunlight.

Granite is made mostly of the minerals

feldspar and quartz. (Reddish feldspars give

this granite its colour and break to form flat

surfaces. The quartz crystals may be a semi-

clear greyish or purplish colour.)

Many granites also contain small crystals of

mica or darker minerals.

GABBRO



• GABBROS are dark-coloured, coarse-grained intrusive

igneous rocks.

• They are very similar to basalts in their mineral

composition.

• They are composed mostly of the mineral feldspar

with smaller amounts of pyroxene and olivine.

OBSIDIAN

• OBSIDIAN is a very shiny natural volcanic glass.

When obsidian breaks it fractures with a distinct

smooth shell-like curved fracture. Look at the

fractures in the photo above.

• Obsidian is produced when lava cools very quickly.

• When people make glass they melt silica rocks like

sand and quartz then cool it rapidly by placing it in

water. Obsidian is produced in nature in a similar

way. It is the result of volcanic lava coming in

contact with water - often the lava pours into a lake

or ocean and is cooled so quickly that no crystals can

form, producing a glassy texture in the resulting rock.

OBSIDIAN



• OBSIDIAN is usually black or a very dark green

caused by the iron and magnesium in the rock, but it

can also be found in an almost clear form and can

also contain white 'snowflake' crystal patterns of the

mineral Cristobalite as shown in the photo above.

• Ancient people throughout the world have used

obsidian for arrowheads, knives, spearheads, and

cutting tools of all kinds. Today obsidian is used as a

scalpel by doctors in very sensitive eye operations.

IGNEOUS ROCKS

- review



IGNEOUS rocks are formed from the

cooling and consolidation of magma



• PLUTONIC (intrusive) – cooled below the

surface



• VOLCANIC (extrusive) – cooled on the

surface

IGNEOUS ROCKS

- review



IGNEOUS ROCK textures are formed by the

rate of cooling and the chemical composition

of the magma



• GLASSY – no minerals present

e.g. obsidian

• CRYSTALLINE – rocks made of mineral grains

e.g. granite

• VESICULAR – with bubble holes

e.g. pumice, scoria

• PORPHYRITIC – mixture of coarse and fine grains

e.g. basalt

Subduction-related igneous rocks









http://geollab.jmu.edu/Fichter/PlateTect/igevol.html


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