1 / 31

I. Processes that change the composition of the magma A. Fractional crystallization (crystal settling) B. Assimilation

Igneous Processes, Igneous Intrusions. I. Processes that change the composition of the magma A. Fractional crystallization (crystal settling) B. Assimilation C. Magma mixing Online rocks and mineral table. Viscosity & melts Partial melt Bowen’s reaction series.

talli
Download Presentation

I. Processes that change the composition of the magma A. Fractional crystallization (crystal settling) B. Assimilation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Igneous Processes, Igneous Intrusions • I. Processes that change the composition of the magma • A. Fractional crystallization (crystal settling) • B. Assimilation • C. Magma mixing • Online rocks and mineral table. • Viscosity & melts • Partial melt • Bowen’s reaction series

  2. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • Basics • Basalt and Gabbro— • Low viscosity, so often reach the surface (most common rock) • 1. Oceanic Basalts • Mid ocean ridge basalts (MORBs) • 65% of Earth’s surface • Divergent boundaries • b. Ocean Island Basalts (OIBs) • Over hot spots

  3. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • Basalts and Gabbros • Oceanic Basalts • 2.Continental Basalts (rare) • a. continental rifting • b. continental hot spots • c. over subduction zones • rare because often undergo fractional crystallization  more felsic rocks

  4. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks B. Andesite and Diorite Forms over subduction zones Basalt forms from partial melting of ultramafic mantle Fractional crystallization and assimilation of crust  intermediate magmas Also, melting of sediment on top of slab  more intermediate magmas

  5. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks C. Rhyolites and Granites Continental hot spots Over subduction zones So the melts are very viscous, so they rarely reach the surface, usually plutonic/intrusive. Rhyolite and granite form by: Melting of crust Heat source from intermediate and mafic magmas. Fractional crystallization and assimilation are important

  6. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • III. Intrusive Igneous Rocks (plutonic rocks) • Plutons—formations created by emplacement of magma at depth • Tabular • 1. Dike—discordant, cuts cross pre-existing layers • Look lie sheets and generally dip steeply or vertical • Dikes are magma injected into fractures - pressure of magma may open up small fractures Range in size from < centimeter to hundreds of kilometers Often more resistant to erosion than surrounding rock, so remains like a wall Spanish Peaks, southern Colorado, Shiprock Peak, NM, all over SW US

  7. 06_10.jpg

  8. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • III. Intrusive Igneous Rocks (plutonic rocks). • Plutons—formations created by emplacement of magma at depth • Tabular • 2. Sill: a concordant tabular pluton • Lies parallel to layers of preexisting rock. • Intrudes between layers and pushed overlying rock up, so shallow where overlying pressure is low. • Generally basalt (low viscosity), form uniform thickness layers/large extent

  9. 06_11e.jpg

  10. 06_11f.jpg

  11. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks

  12. 06_11b.jpg

  13. 06_11c.jpg

  14. 06_11d.jpg

  15. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • III. Intrusive Igneous Rocks (plutonic rocks). • Plutons—formations created by emplacement of magma at depth • Tabular • 3. Laccolith: concordant, similar to sill, but mushroom shaped/domed • Formed by more viscous magma: intermediate - felsic • Shallow depth = low pressure • Henry Mountains of SE Utah (draw erosion of overlying rock to form mts)

  16. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • III. Intrusive Igneous Rocks (plutonic rocks). • Plutons—formations created by emplacement of magma at depth • A. Massive plutons—several km thick and 10’s-100’s km across • Batholiths—massive discordant plutons • When exposed, surface areas of >hundred km2 • Intermediate-felsic (too viscous to reach surface) • Form ~25 km below the surface Examples: Sierra Nevada Mts., Yosemite, White Mts in NH, Pikes Peak CO, Idaho Batholith

  17. Plate tectonics and Igneous Rocks • III. Intrusive Igneous Rocks (plutonic rocks). • Plutons—formations created by emplacement of magma at depth • A. Massive plutons—several km thick and 10’s-100’s km across • Batholiths: massive discordant plutons • When exposed, surface areas of >hundred km2 • Intermediate-felsic (too viscous to reach surface) • Form ~25 km below the surface Examples: Sierra Nevada Mts., Yosemite, White Mts in NH, Pikes Peak CO, Idaho Batholith

  18. 06_12.jpg

  19. 06_13a.jpg

  20. 06_13b.jpg

  21. 06_14ab.jpg

  22. 06_17a.jpg

  23. 06_17b.jpg

  24. Plate tectonic setting and igneous rock types 06_19.jpg

  25. Summary Intrusive rocks Cool slowly Phaneritic texture Extrusive rocks (volanic rx) Cool rapidly Aphanitic texture Types of igneous rocks and tectonic settings Divergent boundary Convergent boundary Concepts Partial melting Fractional crystallization & Crystal settling Assimilation Magma Mixing Igneous rocks on and in the Earth Dikes, sills, batholiths

More Related