Chapter 3 - Igneous Rocks Flashcards

1
Q

Igneous rock

A

Formed from the cooling and crystallization of magma.

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2
Q

Sedimentary rock

A

Formed when weathered fragments of other rocks are buried, compressed, and cemented together, or when minerals precipitate directly from solution.

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3
Q

Metamorphic rock

A

Formed by alteration (due to heat, pressure and/or chemical action) of a pre-existing igneous or sedimentary rock

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4
Q

Rock cycle

A

Shows how the 3 rock types transform into one another.

There are two forces:
1. Earth’s internal heat engine, which moves material around in the core and the mantle, and leads to clow but significant changes within the crust.
2. The hydrological cycle, which is the movement of water, ice and are at the surface, and is powered by the sun.

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5
Q

Intrusive igneous rock

A

When magma cools slowly within the crust over centuries to hundreds of years.x

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6
Q

Extrusive igneous rock

A

Erupts to the surface and cools quickly, in seconds to years.

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7
Q

Sediments

A

The weathered material (small rocks and mineral fragments) that are eroded, transported and deposited.

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8
Q

Partial Melting

A

When only part of a rock melts - this happens because rocks are not pure. Most rocks are made of several minerals, each having a different melting point.

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9
Q

Decompression Melting

A

Takes place within Earth when a body of rock is held at same temperature, but pressure is reduced. If a rock is hot enough to be close to melting point and is moved towards the surface, the pressure is reduced, and the rock can move to the liquid side of its melting curve.

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10
Q

Flux Melting

A

If a rock is close to its melting point and water is added, the melting point is reduced and partial melting occurs.

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11
Q

Polymerize

A

Si and O combine to form silica tetrahedra and as cooling continues, they link together to form chains.

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12
Q

Bowen Reaction Series

A

The sequence in which minerals crystallize from magma.

Created by Canadian petrologist Normal L. Bowen.

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13
Q

Gabbro

A

Magma becomes Gabbro when cooling slowly underground.

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14
Q

Basalt

A

Magma becomes Basalt when cooling quickly at the surface.

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15
Q

Fractional Crystallization

A

When crystals form and settle in the magma chamber, making the mafic magma more of a felsic magma due to the loss of iron and magnesium to the crystals.

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16
Q

Porphyritic

A

A texture of rock when there is significant different in crystal size, where larger crystals are at least 10x bigger than the average smaller crystals.

17
Q

Phaneritic

A

Having crystals that are large enough to see by eye - >0.5mm

(From Greek: “visible”)

18
Q

Aphanitic

A

Crystals too small to distinguish.

(From Greek: “unseen”)

19
Q

Country rock

A

A native rock to a region in contrast to any intrusion of viscous geological material (magma).

20
Q

Stoping

A

When a fragment of country rock breaks and falls into magma. The resulting fragments of this event are called XENOLITHS. (From Greek: “strange rock”)

21
Q

Xenolith

A

The resulting rock formation when a country rock fragment falls into magma.

22
Q

Pluton

A

When upward moving magma cools within the crust.

23
Q

Stocks

A

Large irregular shaped pluton, exposure to surface is < 100 km sq.

24
Q

Batholiths

A

Large irregular shaped pluton, exposure to surface is > 100 km sq.

25
Q

Concordant

A

Being parallel to the existing layering surrounding said material.

26
Q

Sill

A

Rock that is concordant to layering surrounding it.

27
Q

Dyke

A

Rock layer that is discordant to layering surrounding it.

28
Q

Laccolith

A

A sill-like body that expanded upward by deforming the overlaying rock.

29
Q

Pipe

A

A cylindrical body that served as a conduit for movement of magma.

30
Q

Felsic

A

Term used for light-colored igneous minerals and igneous rocks rich in feldspar and silica.

Example: Granite, rhyolite

31
Q

Mafic

A

An igneous rock with high proportion of pyroxene and olivine (which form from magnesium and ferric (iron) minerals.

Example: Gabbro (intrusive), basalt (extrusive)

32
Q

Ultramafic

A

Igneous rock that consists of mostly ferromagnesian minerals, no quartz, and <45% SiO2

33
Q

Intermediate rocks

A

Cooling behavior lies between felsic and mafic.

Example: Diorite, andesite

34
Q

Continuous Series

(re: Bowen series)

A

The continuous, recurring change in composition of a mineral within a magma chamber. The mineral changes its composition by continuously exchanging cations with the magma to reach equilibrium.

35
Q

Discontinuous Series

(re: Bowen series)

A

A sequence of mineral reactions which takes place at specific temperatures of cooling magma. A mineral will remain in equilibrium until it reaches its reaction temperature. The mineral will react and form a new mineral. This mineral will maintain equilibrium until the next reaction temperature.

These minerals are:

Olivine > Pyroxene > Amphibole > Biotite