igneous rocks ch 3 prentice hall p. 78-81 ch 3 prentice hall p. 78-81
TRANSCRIPT
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Igneous Rocks
Igneous RocksCH 3 Prentice Hall
p. 78-81CH 3 Prentice Hall
p. 78-81
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• Form from lava or magma• Made of mineral crystals• Classified according to:– Origin– Texture– Mineral Composition
Igneous Rocks
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• Classified according to where they formed.
Intrusive Extrusive
Origin of Igneous Rocks
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Intrusive
• Forms when magma hardens beneath the Earth’s surface.• Granite• Makes up most of
the continental crust.
Origin of Igneous Rocks
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Extrusive
• Forms from lava that erupted onto Earth’s surface.• Basalt
• Forms much of the ocean crust.
Origin of Igneous Rocks
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A
•Streak
B
•Origin
C
•Solid
D
•Hardness
Which is a way to identify if a rock is Igneous?
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Igneous Rock Textures
•Slowly cooling, large crystals
•Example: Granite
Coarse Grained
•Lava cools quickly
•Forms smaller crystals.
Fine Grained
•Both textures – large AND small crystals.
•Cools slowly, then rapidly.
Porphyritic
•Rock cools too quickly for crystals to form.
No Crystals
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• A solid in which the atoms are arranged in a pattern that repeats again and again.
What is a Crystal?
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• Depends on the size and shape of it’s mineral crystals.
Igneous Rock Textures
Coarse Grained Porphyritic Fine Grained
No Crystals No Crystals
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A
•Coarse-grained
B
•Fine-grained
C
•Porphyritic
D
•No visible crystals
In your tray, what is the texture of sample…
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• Most of Earth’s rocks contain silica (silicon dioxide, SiO2)
Mineral Composition
High Silica (Felsic)
• Forms light colored rocks.• Granite
• Dark to light gray, red and pink.
Low Silica (Mafic)
• Forms dark colored rocks.• Basalt
• Contains dark colored minerals. No quartz.
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Igneous Rock Chart
Origin
Intrusive
(Magma)
Coarse
Grained
GraniteContinental
CrustGabbro
Both Porphyritic
Large crystals with small crystals
Scattered on top.
Extrusive
(Lava)
Fine- Grain
edRhyolite
BasaltOcean
Crust
No Cryst
als Pumice Obsidian
Low Density HighFelsic (High) Silica Mafic (low)
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A B C
Which rock likely has the most silica?
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Granite - building materials
Obsidian - sharp tools
Basalt - gravel, construction
Pumice - used for cleaning and polishing
Uses of Igneous Rocks
• Igneous rocks are useful because they are hard, durable and dense
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Class Work
• Examine 5 Igneous Rocks and write down their texture–(Fine-grain, Coarse-grain, Porphyritic,
No Grain)• Read the textbook, pages 78-81–Answer Questions 1 – 4 on page
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Silica Content
• Felsic– Granite– Rhyolite
• Mafic–Basalt–Gabbro
• Intermediate– Diorite– Andesite