2.14 Classification of igneous rocks Flashcards
What is meant by the term felsic?
felsic minerals are quartz and feldspar - minerals that are rich in silica
felsic is a contraction of feldspar and silica
What is meant by the term mafic when applied to minerals?
mafic minerals are rich in magnesium and iron (they are sometimes also called ferromagnesian minerals) - it includes micas (biotite and muscovite), amphiboles, pyroxenes and olivine
mafic is a contraction of magnesium and ferric
What is the silica content of an ultramafic rock?
<45% silica
What is the silica content of a mafic rock?
45%-52%
What is the silica content of an intermediate rock?
52-66%
What is the silica content of a silicic rock?
> 66% silica
What is the crystal size for coarse grained igneous rocks?
> 5mm
What is the crystal size for a medium grained igneous rock?
1mm - 5mm
What is the crystal size for a fine-grained igneous rock?
<1mm
What is the name of a fine grained mafic rock?
basalt
What is the name of a medium grained mafic rock?
dolerite
What is the name of a coarse grained mafic rock?
gabbro
What is the name of a fine grained intermediate rock?
andesite
What is the name of a medium grained intermediate rock?
microdiorite
What is the name of a coarse grained intermediate rock?
diorite
What is the name of a coarse grained intermediate rock?
diorite
What is the name of a fine grained silicic rock?
rhyolite
What is the name of a medium grained silicic rock?
microgranite
What is the name of a coarse grained silicic rock?
microgranite
What is the name for an ultramafic rock?
peridotite
How could you identify the approximate silica content of a rock in the field (and classify the rock)?
the colour - felsic minerals are light in colour while mafic minerals are darker
Why are rhyolites relatively rare?
silica rich magma is viscous making it difficult for it to rise to the surface and create a fine-grained rock
What is flow banding?
a banded, streaky appearance created in rhyolites due to the friction within the viscous magma as it flows
What is obsidian?
a volcanic glass (high silica content)
What is pumice?
a silica rich igneous rock with many vesicles (gas bubbles) and glassy texture, which is produced by the explosive eruption of the viscous magma
What is an amygdale (resulting in amygdaloidal texture)?
vesicles (gas bubbles) can be filled in by minerals creating amygdales
How can quartz be recognised in igneous rocks?
- crystals are grey in colour with the appearance of broken bottle glass
- the crystals lack cleavage
- the crystals have an amorphous shape as they crystallised in an enclosed space
How can feldspars be recognised in igneous rocks?
- K feldspar is pink in colour
- plagioclase is usually grey or white feldspar
- if you look at it with a hand lens you will see the glassy appearance and smooth, straight cleavage surfaces
How can biotite and muscovite mica be recognised in igneous rocks?
- biotite crystals are shiny and black
- muscovite crystals are silvery flakes
Why is silica percentage not the same as the percentage of quartz?
quartz is made entirely of silica but the silica percentage includes all the siica in all of the rock-forming minerals - a rock with no quartz will still contain silica in silicate minerals such as olivine
silica content cannot be seen in the field - colour can be an indicator