Magma and Igneous Rocks
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Transcript Magma and Igneous Rocks
Chapter 6
Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
LECTURE OUTLINE
earth
Portrait of a Planet
Third Edition
©2008 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Up from the Inferno:
Magma and Igneous Rocks
Prepared by
Ron Parker
Earlham College Department of
Geosciences
Richmond, Indiana
Igneous Rocks
Solidified molten rock (which freezes at high temp).
1,100°C to 650°C.
Depends on composition.
Earth is mostly igneous rock.
Magma – Subsurface melt.
Lava – Melt at the surface.
Magma erupts via volcanoes.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Rocks
Melted rock can cool above or below ground.
Intrusive igneous rocks – Cool slowly underground.
Extrusive igneous rocks – Cool quickly at the surface.
Lava – Cooled liquid.
Pyroclastic debris – Cooled fragments.
Ash.
Fragmented lava.
There are many varieties
of igneous rocks.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Formation
Why does magma form?
Earth is hot inside. Why?
Planetesimal and meteorite accretion.
Gravitational compression.
Differentiation.
Radioactive mineral decay.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Formation
Partial melting in
crust / upper mantle.
Melting is from…
Pressure release.
Volatile addition.
Heat transfer.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Formation
Geothermal gradient – Earth is hot inside.
Crustal temperature (T) increases 25°C / km with depth.
At the base of the lithosphere T ~ 1,280 °C.
Geothermal gradient varies
from place to place.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Formation
Pressure release.
Base of the crust is hot enough to melt mantle rock.
Due to high pressure, the rock does not melt.
A drop in pressure initiates “decompressional melting.”
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Formation
Heat transfer.
Rising magma
carries mantle heat.
This raises T in
crustal rock.
Crustal rock melts at
lower T.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Addition of Volatiles
Volatiles cause rocks to melt at much lower T.
Water.
Carbon dioxide.
Adding volatiles to hot, dry rocks initiates melting.
Important subduction process.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
What Is Magma Made of?
Magmas have 3 components (solid, liquid, and gas).
Solid – Solidified minerals are carried by the liquid.
Liquid – The melt itself is comprised of mobile ions.
Dominantly Si and O; lesser Ca, Fe, Mg, Al, Na, and K.
Other ions to a lesser extent.
Different mixes of elements yield different magmas.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
What Is Magma Made of?
Gas – Volatiles dissolved in the melt.
Dry magma – No volatiles.
Wet magma – To 15% volatiles.
Water vapor (H2O)
Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Sulfur dioxide (SO2)
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Compositions
4 major magma types based on % silica (SiO2).
Felsic (Feldspar and silica)
Intermediate
Mafic (Mg and Fe-rich)
Ultramafic
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
66 to 76% silica.
52 to 66% silica.
45 to 52% silica.
38 to 45% silica.
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Compositions
Composition controls density, T, and viscosity.
Most important is the content of silica (SiO2).
Silica-rich magmas are thick and viscous.
Silica-poor magmas and thin and “runny.”
These characteristics govern eruptive style.
Type
Density
Temperature
Viscosity
Felsic
Very low
Very low (600 to 850°C)
Very High: Explosive eruptions.
Intermediate
Low
Low
High: Explosive eruptions.
Mafic
High
High
Low: Thin, hot runny eruptions.
Ultramafic
Very high
Very high (up to 1,300°C) Very low
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Variation
Why are there different magma compositions?
Magmas vary chemically due to…
Initial source rock compositions.
Partial melting.
Assimilation.
Fractional crystallization.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Variation
Source rock dictates initial magma composition.
Mantle source – Ultramafic and mafic magmas.
Crustal source – Mafic, intermediate, and felsic magmas.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Partial Melting
Upon heating, silica-rich minerals melt first.
Partial melting, then, yields a silica-rich magma.
Removing a partial melt from its source creates:
Felsic magma.
Mafic residue.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Assimilation
Magma melts the country
rock it passes through.
Assimilated materials
change magma
composition.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Mixing
Different magmas may blend in a magma chamber.
The result combines the characteristics of the two.
Often magma mixing is incomplete, resulting in
blobs of one rock type suspended within the other.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Fractional Crystallization
As magma cools, early crystals settle by gravity.
Melt composition changes as a result.
Fe, Mg, and Ca is removed in earlsettled solids.
Si, Al, Na, and K remain in melt and increase.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Fractional Crystallization
Felsic magma can
evolve from mafic
magma.
Progressive removal of
mafic minerals.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Migration
Magma is less dense than rock; it moves upward.
Magma moves by…
Injection into cracks.
Melting overlying rocks.
Squeezed by overburden.
Pressure decrease with upward migration releases
volatiles (bubbles), thereby decreasing density.
Viscosity controls migration ease.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Magma Migration
Viscosity depends on temp, volatiles, and silica.
Temperature:
Hotter - Lower viscosity
Cooler – Higher viscosity.
Volatile content:
More volatiles – Lower viscosity.
Less volatiles – Higher viscosity.
Silica (SiO2) content:
Less SiO2 (Mafic) – Lower viscosity.
More SiO2 (Felsic) – Higher viscosity.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Environments
Two major categories - Based on cooling site.
Extrusive settings – Cool at or near the surface.
Cool rapidly.
Chill too fast to grow big crystals.
Intrusive settings – Cool at depth.
Lose heat slowly.
Crystals grow large.
Most mafic magmas extrude.
Most felsic magmas do not.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Extrusive Characteristics
Lava flows – Sheets of cooled lava.
Lava flows exit volcanic vents and flow outward.
Lava cools as it flows, eventually solidifying.
Low-viscosity lava (basalt) can flow long distances.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Extrusive Characteristics
Explosive ash eruptions.
High-viscosity felsic magma builds volcanic pressure.
Violent eruptions yield huge volumes of volcanic ash.
Ash can cover large regions.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Intrusive Characteristics
Intrusive rocks cool at depth, they don’t surface.
Magma invading colder country rock initiates…
Thermal (heat) metamorphism and melting.
Inflation of fractures pushing the rock aside.
Incorporation of country rock fragments (xenoliths).
Hydrothermal (hot water) alteration.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Intrusive Characteristics
Intrusive contacts preserve evidence of high heat.
Baked zone – Rim of heat altered country rock.
Chill margin – Magma at contact that cooled rapidly.
Xenolith - Country rock fragment in magma.
Thermally altered.
Magma cooled before zenolith could be assimilated.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Intrusive Activity
Magma intrudes into other rocks in 2 ways.
As planar, tabular bodies (dikes and sills), and
As balloon-shaped blobs (plutons).
Size varies widely; plutons can be massive.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Tabular Intrusions
Tend to have a uniform thickness.
Can be traced laterally.
Two major subdivisions.
Sill – Parallels rock fabric.
Dike – Crosscuts rock fabric.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Tabular Intrusions
Dikes and sills modify invaded country rock.
They cause the rock to expand and inflate.
They thermally alter the country rock.
Dikes…
Spread rocks sideways.
Dominate in extensional settings.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Tabular Intrusions
Sills
Lift entire landscapes skyward.
Usually intruded near the surface.
Both dikes and sills exhibit wide variability.
Size.
Thickness (or width).
Lateral continuity.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Large Sill
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Plutonic Activity
Most magma is emplaced at depth in the Earth.
A large, deep igneous body is called a pluton.
Plutonic intrusions modify the crust.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Plutonic Activity
Plutons may coalesce to
form a larger batholith.
Plutons are created at
subduction zones.
Magma generation may
occur of over 10s of Ma.
Long subduction history
linked to large batholiths.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Intrusive and Extrusive
Intrusive and extrusive rocks commonly co-occur.
Magma chambers feed overlying volcanoes.
Magma chambers may cool to become plutons.
Many igneous geometries are possible.
Dikes.
Sills.
Laccoliths.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Influence on Landscape
Deeper features are exposed by uplift and erosion.
Intrusive rocks are more resistant to erosion.
Intrusive rocks often stand above the landscape.
“Unroofing” takes long periods of geologic time.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Cooling Rates
Cooling rate – How fast
is heat lost?
Depth: Deep is hot,
shallow is cool.
Deep plutons cool slowly.
Shallow flows cool
rapidly.
Shape: Surface to volume
ratio.
Spherical bodies cool
slowly.
Tabular bodies cool
faster.
Ground water.
Ground water removes
heat.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Textures
The size, shape, and arrangement of the minerals.
Glassy – Made of solid glass or glass shards.
Interlocking crystals – Minerals that fit like jigsaw pieces.
Fragmental – Pieces of pre-existing rocks.
Texture directly reflects magma history.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Glassy Textures
Form by very rapid cooling of lava in water or air.
Quenching forms obsidian (volcanic glass).
Basalts may quench into blobs of lava called pillows.
Glasses may fragment explosively.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Crystalline Textures
Texture immediately reveals cooling history.
Aphanitic (finely crystalline).
Rapid cooling – extrusive.
Crystals do not have time to grow.
Phaneritic – (coarsely crystalline).
Slow cooling – Intrusive.
Crystals have a long time to grow.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Crystalline Textures
Texture immediately reveals cooling history.
Porphyritic – A mixture of coarse and fine crystals.
Indicates a 2-stage history.
Initial slow cooling creates large phenocrysts.
Subsequent eruption cools remaining magma quickly.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Other Textures
Pegmatitic - Exceptionally coarse mineral crystals.
From late stage crystallization of granitic magmas
Many unusual minerals are found in pegmatites.
Made from ions that don’t easily fit into crystals.
Some pegmatites are rich in prized minerals.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Classification
Based upon composition and texture.
Composition – Felsic, intermediate, mafic, ultramafic.
Texture - Fine (aphanitic), coarse (phaneritic).
Type
Aphanitic (fine)
Phaneritic (coarse)
Felsic
Rhyolite
Granite
Intermediate
Andesite
Diorite
Basalt
Gabbro
Very high
Very high (up to 1300°C)
Mafic
Ultramafic
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Glassy Classification
Glassy igneous rocks.
Obsidian – Volcanic glass from rapidly cooled lava.
Quenching – Lava flowing into water.
High-silica lavas – These can make glass without quenching.
Pumice – Frothy felsic rock full of vesicles; it floats.
Scoria – Glassy, vesicular mafic rock.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Crystalline Classification
Composition.
Texture.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Pyroclastic Classification
Pyroclastic – Fragments of violent eruptions.
Tuff – Volcanic ash that has fallen on land.
Volcanic breccia – Made of larger volcanic fragments.
Hyaloclasite – Fragments of lava exploded into water.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Activity Distribution
Igneous activity tracks tectonic plate boundaries.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
Igneous Activity Distribution
Igneous activity tracks tectonic plate boundaries.
Hot spots – Mafic volcanic activity.
Convergent boundaries – Felsic igneous activity.
Divergent boundaries – Mafic igneous activity.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
This concludes the
Chapter 6
Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks
LECTURE OUTLINE
earth
Portrait of a Planet
Third Edition
©2008 W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Earth: Portrait of a Planet, 3rd edition, by Stephen Marshak
Chapter 6: Up from the Inferno: Magma and Igneous Rocks