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Igneous Rocks. What is an igneous rock?. Born from fire Any rock that forms from magma or lava Most contain mineral crystals. Characteristics of Igneous Rocks. Classified according to their… Origin Texture Mineral composition. Origin.
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What is an igneous rock? Born from fire Any rock that forms from magma or lava Most contain mineral crystals
Characteristics of Igneous Rocks • Classified according to their… • Origin • Texture • Mineral composition
Origin • Extrusive Rock- formed from lava that erupted onto Earth’s surface (ex. Basalt) • Intrusive Rock- igneous rock that formed when magma hardened beneath Earth’s surface (ex. Granite)
Basalt Granite
Texture • Fine-grained • Coarse-grained • Glassy • porphyritic
Fine-Grained • Rapid cooling lava • Small crystals • Extrusive rocks
Coarse-Grained • Slow cooling magma • Large crystals • Intrusive rocks
Porphyritic • Large crystals scattered on a background of much smaller crystals • Intrusive rocks cool in 2 stages- rate of cooling is changed from slow to fast
Flow banding What is the texture of the rock?
Mineral Composition • Lava that is low in silica- dark colored rocks • Magma high in silica- light colored rock
Uses of Igneous Rocks • Igneous rocks are hard, dense, and durable so they are used for • Tools • Building materials • Granite- long history of building material
What is a sedimentary rock? • Composed of sediments derived from pre-existing rocks or by the crystallization of minerals that were held in solutions • Sediment- small, solid pieces of material that come from rocks or living things • Can include fossils, leaves, etc.
How do the sediments turn into a rock? • Erosion • Deposition • Compaction • Cementation
Erosion • Water, wind, or ice loosen and carry away fragments of rock
Deposition • That’s when sediments stop traveling by water or wind and settle
Compaction • Sediments fit loosely • Years go by…thick layers build up • Layers are heavy and press down • Compaction- process that presses sediments together (squeezes)
Cementation • During compaction…minerals dissolve in water • Dissolved minerals crystallize and glue particles of sediments together • Whole process: millions of years
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Types of Sedimentary Rocks • Clastic rocks • Organic rocks • Chemical rocks
Clastic Rocks • Forms when rock fragments are squeezed together • Grouped by size of fragments & of which they are made • Ex. shale, sandstone, conglomerate and breccia
Shale • Forms from tiny particles of clay • Thin, flat layers
Sandstone • Forms from sand Contains holes- can absorb water
Conglomerate & Breccia • Mixture of rock fragments of different sizes
Organic Rocks • Remains of plants & animals are deposited in layers • Coal and limestone
Coal • From remains of swampy plants
Limestone • From hard shells of living things • Ex. chalk
Chemical Rocks • Forms when minerals that are dissolved in a solution crystallize (ex. rock salt)
What is a metamorphic rock? • A rock that has changed its form • Can change igneous, sedimentary, or other metamorphic rocks
How do metamorphic rocks form? • Heat and pressure beneath Earth’s surface change rock • Its appearance, texture, crystal structure, and mineral content change
Formation of Metamorphic Rocks • Earth’s plates push rock down toward mantle- HOT! • Magma also heats the rock • The deeper the rock is buried…the greater the pressure • Pressure and heat change minerals
GRANITE Granite to Gneiss Gneissic granite – separation of dark & light minerals is just beginning Well banded gneiss
Classifying Metamorphic Rocks • Classify rocks by arrangement of grains that make up the rock • Two types: foliated and nonfoliated
Grains arranged in parallel layers Can split apart along the bands Foliated Rock
Slate Shale Shale to Slate
Nonfoliated Rock • Mineral grains are arranged randomly • Do not split into layers Marble
Uses of Metamorphic rocks • Slate and marble- most useful metamorphic rocks • Marbles- buildings and statues • Slate- flooring, roofing, chalkboards