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Table of Contents. Classifying Rocks Igneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks Rocks from Reefs Metamorphic Rocks The Rock Cycle. When studying a rock sample, geologists observe the rock’s mineral composition, color , and texture. - Classifying Rocks. Studying Rocks. - Classifying Rocks.
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Table of Contents Classifying Rocks Igneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks Rocks from Reefs Metamorphic Rocks The Rock Cycle
When studying a rock sample, geologists observe the rock’s mineral composition, color, and texture. - Classifying Rocks Studying Rocks
- Classifying Rocks Mineral Composition and Color • Rock – a solid mixture of minerals and other materials. • Rock-forming minerals – the common minerals that make up most of the rocks of Earth’s crust. • Granite – tends to be a light-colored rock that has highsilica content • Basalt – tends to be a dark-colored rock that is low in silica
- Classifying Rocks Texture • Grains – particles of minerals or other rocks that give a rock its texture. • Texture – the look and feel of a rock’s surface, determined by the size, shape, and pattern of a rock’s grains.
- Classifying Rocks Texture • Grain size • Coarse-grained – large easy to see grains • Fine-grained – so small they can only be seen under a microscope
- Classifying Rocks Texture • Grain Shape – varies greatly from sand grains to large triangular grains • Grain Pattern – can vary also from layers to swirls to bands
- Classifying Rocks How Rocks Form • Geologists classify rocks into three major groups: • igneous rock, sedimentary rock, and metamorphic rock.
- Classifying Rocks How Rocks Form • Igneous rock – type of rock that forms from the melting then cooling of molten rock at or below the surface. • Sedimentary rock – type of rock that forms when particles from other rocks or the remains of plants and animals are pressed and cemented together. • Metamorphic rock – type of rock that forms from an existing rock that is changed by heat and pressure
- Igneous Rocks Classifying Igneous Rocks • Igneous rocks are classified according to their origin, texture, and mineral composition.
Classifying Igneous Rocks • Extrusive igneous rock – forms from lava on Earth’s surface. • Intrusive igneous rock – forms when magma hardens beneath Earth’s surface. • The faster igneous rock cools, the finer the grains • Extrusive igneous rock tends to be a finer-grained rock than intrusive igneous rock
- Igneous Rocks Mineral Mixture • Granite is a mixture of light-colored minerals, such as feldspar and quartz, and dark-colored minerals, including hornblende and different types of mica. But granite can vary in mineral composition. This affects its color and texture.
Feldspar Reading Graphs: What mineral is most abundant in granite? - Igneous Rocks Mineral Mixture
10% Reading Graphs: About what percentage of granite is made up of dark minerals? - Igneous Rocks Mineral Mixture
100% - (35% + 10%) = 55% Calculating: If the amount of quartz increases to 35 percent and the amount of dark-colored minerals stays the same, what percentage of the granite will be made up of feldspar? - Igneous Rocks Mineral Mixture
The overall color would be darker. Predicting: How would the color of the granite change if it contained less feldspar and more mica and hornblende? - Igneous Rocks Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks Links on Igneous Rocks • Click the SciLinks button for links on igneous rocks.
- Sedimentary Rocks From Sediment to Rock • Most sedimentary rocks are formed through a series of processes: erosion, deposition, compaction, and cementation.
- Sedimentary Rocks From Sediment to Rock • Sediment – small, solid pieces of material that come from rocks or organisms. • Usually forms due to erosion • Erosion – a destructive process in which water or wind loosens and carries away fragments of rock. • Deposition – process by which sediment settles out of the water or wind that is carrying it.
- Sedimentary Rocks From Sediment to Rock • Compaction – process by which sediments are pressed together under their own weight. • Occurs over millions of years as layers build • Cementation – process by which dissolved minerals crystallize and glue particles of sediment together into one mass. • Takes place when sediment is in the presence of water
- Sedimentary Rocks Types of Sedimentary Rock • There are three major groups of sedimentary rocks: • clastic rocks, organic rocks, and chemical rocks. • Clastic rock – sedimentary rock that forms when rock fragments are squeezed together under high pressure. • Can range in size from microscopic clay particles to large boulders • Ex: shale, sandstone, conglomerate, and breccia
- Sedimentary Rocks Types of Sedimentary Rock Peat • Organic rock – sedimentary rock that forms from remains of organisms deposited in thick layers. • Ex: Coal and Limestone • Coal forms from the remains of swampplants buried in water. • Limestone forms in the ocean, where many living things, such as coral, clams, and oysters, have hard shells made of calcite that collect on the ocean floor. Lignite Bituminous Anthracite
- Sedimentary Rocks Types of Sedimentary Rock • Chemical rock – sedimentary rock that forms when minerals crystallize from a solution. (Reacts to HCl) • Ex: Limestone forms from calcite deposits dissolved in lakes, rivers, streams.
- Sedimentary Rocks Uses of Sedimentary Rock • Sedimentary rock has been used for thousands of years in building structures, tools, and statues. • Ex: The White House in Washington D.C. is constructed of sandstone.
- Sedimentary Rocks Links on Sedimentary Rocks • Click the SciLinks button for links on sedimentary rocks.
- Rocks From Reefs Coral Reefs • Coral reef – a structure of calcite skeletons built up by coral animals in warm, shallow ocean water. • When coral animals die, their skeletons remain. More corals build on top of them, gradually forming a coral reef. • Only form in ocean water between 30°N and 30°S latitude
Coral Reefs(not in notes) • Coral reef is really organic(from living things) limestone. • Deposits of organic limestone help geologists figure out what the environment was like long ago. • If they find a fossil of coral reef, they would know that location used to contain warm, shallow ocean water.
- Rocks From Reefs More on Coral Landforms • Click the PHSchool.com button for an activityabout coral landforms.
- Metamorphic Rocks Metamorphic Rock • Metamorphic rock – forms when heat and pressure beneath Earth’s surface changes the appearance, texture, crystalstructure, and mineral content of either igneous, sedimentary, or other metamorphic rock.
- Metamorphic Rocks Types of Metamorphic Rocks • Geologists classify metamorphic rocks according to the arrangement of the grains that make up the rocks. • Foliated rocks– metamorphic rocks that have grains arranged in parallel layers or bands. • Ex: Slate – metamorphic shale (denser and more compact than shale) Shale Slate Gneiss
- Metamorphic Rocks Types of Metamorphic Rocks • Nonfoliated rocks – metamorphic rocks that have randomly arranged metamorphic grains that do notsplit into layers • Ex: Quartzite – metamorphic sandstone Marble – metamorphic limestone
- Metamorphic Rocks Links on Metamorphic Rocks • Click the SciLinks button for links on metamorphic rocks.
- The Rock Cycle A Cycle of Many Pathways • Forces deep inside Earth and at the surface produce a slow cycle that builds, destroys, and changes the rocks in the crust.
- The Rock Cycle • Rock cycle – processes on the surface and inside Earth that slowly change rocks from one kind to another.
- The Rock Cycle The Rock Cycle and Plate Tectonics • Plate movements start the rock cycle by helping to form magma, the source of igneous rocks. • Plate movements also cause faulting, folding, and other motions of the crust that help to form sedimentary and metamorphic rocks.
- The Rock Cycle Rock Cycle Activity • Click the Active Art button to open a browser window and access Active Art about the rock cycle.
- The Rock Cycle Metamorphic Igneous Sedimentary
Graphic Organizer Metamorphic Igneous Organic Foliated Extrusive Chemical