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3.5: Types of Rocks

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    IGNEOUS ROCKS

    Igneous rocks form from the cooling and hardening of molten magma in many different environments. These rocks are identified by their composition and texture. More than 700 different types of igneous rocks are known.

    Magma Composition

    The rock beneath the Earth’s surface is sometimes heated to high enough temperatures that it melts to create magma. Different magmas have different composition and contain whatever elements were in the rock that melted. Magmas also contain gases. The main elements are the same as the elements found in the crust. Table 1 lists the abundance of elements found in the Earth’s crust and in magma. The remaining 1.5% is made up of many other elements that are present in tiny quantities.

    Table 1. Elements in Earth’s Crust and Magma
    Element Symbol Percent
    Oxygen O 46.6%
    Silicon Si 27.7%
    Aluminum Al 8.1%
    Iron Fe 5.0%
    Calcium Ca 3.6%
    Sodium Na 2.8%
    Potassium K 2.6%
    Magnesium Mg 2.1%
    Total   98.5%

    Whether rock melts to create magma depends on several factors:

    • Temperature: Temperature increases with depth, so melting is more likely to occur at greater depths.
    • Pressure: Pressure increases with depth, but increased pressure raises the melting temperature, so melting is less likely to occur at higher pressures.
    • Water: The addition of water changes the melting point of rock. As the amount of water increases, the melting point decreases.
    • Rock composition: Minerals melt at different temperatures, so the temperature must be high enough to melt at least some minerals in the rock. The first mineral to melt from a rock will be quartz (if present) and the last will be olivine (if present).

    The different geologic settings that produce varying conditions under which rocks melt will be discussed in the “Plate Tectonics” chapter.

    As a rock heats up, the minerals that melt at the lowest temperatures will melt first.Partial melting occurs when the temperature on a rock is high enough to melt only some of the minerals in the rock. The minerals that will melt will be those that melt at lower temperatures. Fractional crystallization is the opposite of partial melting. This process describes the crystallization of different minerals as magma cools.

    Bowen’s Reaction Series indicates the temperatures at which minerals melt or crystallize (figure 1). An understanding of the way atoms join together to form minerals leads to an understanding of how different igneous rocks form. Bowen’s Reaction Series also explains why some minerals are always found together and some are never found together.

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    Figure 1. Bowen's Reaction Series

    Follow this link to see a diagram illustrating Bowen’s Reaction Series.

    This excellent video that explains Bowen’s Reaction Series in detail.

    If the liquid separates from the solids at any time in partial melting or fractional crystallization, the chemical composition of the liquid and solid will be different. When that liquid crystallizes, the resulting igneous rock will have a different composition from the parent rock.

    Intrusive and Extrusive Igneous Rocks

    Igneous rocks are called intrusive when they cool and solidify beneath the surface. Intrusive rocks form plutons and so are also called plutonic. A pluton is an igneous intrusive rock body that has cooled in the crust. When magma cools within the Earth, the cooling proceeds slowly. Slow cooling allows time for large crystals to form, so intrusive igneous rocks have visible crystals. Granite is the most common intrusive igneous rock (see figure 2 for an example).

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    Figure 2. Granite is made of four minerals, all visible to the naked eye: feldspar (white), quartz (translucent), hornblende (black), and biotite (black, platy).

    Igneous rocks make up most of the rocks on Earth. Most igneous rocks are buried below the surface and covered with sedimentary rock, or are buried beneath the ocean water. In some places, geological processes have brought igneous rocks to the surface. Figure 3 below shows a landscape in California’s Sierra Nevada made of granite that has been raised to create mountains.

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    Figure 3. California's Sierra Nevada is intrusive igneous rock exposed at Earth's surface.

    Igneous rocks are called extrusive when they cool and solidify above the surface. These rocks usually form from a volcano, so they are also called volcanic rocks (figure 4).

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    Figure 4. Extrusive igneous rocks form after lava cools above the surface.

    Extrusive igneous rocks cool much more rapidly than intrusive rocks. There is little time for crystals to form, so extrusive igneous rocks have tiny crystals (figure 5).

    RTR Figure 5.png
    Figure 5. Cooled lava forms basalt with no visible crystals. Why are there no visible crystals?

    Some volcanic rocks have a mixed texture. A rock such as an andesite may have large crystals set within a matrix of tiny crystals. In this case, the magma cooled enough to form some crystals before erupting. Once erupted, the rest of the lava cooled rapidly. This is called porphyritic texture.

    Cooling rate and gas content create other textures (see figure 6 for examples of different textures). Lavas that cool extremely rapidly may have a glassy texture. Those with many holes from gas bubbles have a vesicular texture.

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    Figure 6. Different cooling rate and gas content resulted in these different textures.

    Igneous Rock Classification

    Igneous rocks are classified by their composition, from felsic to ultramafic. The characteristics and example minerals in each type are included in table 2.

    Table 2. Properties of Igneous Rock Compositions
    Composition Color Density Minerals
    Felsic Light Low Quartz, orthoclase feldspar
    Intermediate Intermediate Intermediate Plagioclase feldspar, biotite, amphibole
    Mafic Dark High Olivine, pyroxene
    Ultramafic Very dark Very high Olivine
    Table 3. Silica Composition and Texture of Major Igneous Rocks
    Type Amount of Silica Extrusive Intrusive
    Ultramafic <45% Komatiite Peridotite
    Mafic 45-52% Basalt Gabbro
    Intermediate 52-63% Andesite Diorite
    Intermediate-Felsic 63-69% Dacite Granodiorite
    Felsic >69% SiO2 Rhyolite Granite

    Some of the rocks in the table 3 were pictured earlier in this chapter. Look back at them and, using what you know about the size of crystals in extrusive and intrusive rocks and the composition of felsic and mafic rocks, identify the rocks in the following photos in figure 7:

    RTR Figure 7.png
    Figure 7. These are photos of A) rhyolite, B) gabbro, C) peridotite, and D) komatiite.

    Uses of Igneous Rocks

    Igneous rocks have a wide variety of uses. One important use is as stone for buildings and statues. Granite is used for both of these purposes and is popular for kitchen countertops (figure 8).

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    Figure 8. Granite is an igneous rock used commonly in statues and building materials.

    Pumice is commonly used as an abrasive. Pumice is used to smooth skin or scrape up grime around the house. When pumice is placed into giant washing machines with newly manufactured jeans and tumbled, the result is “stone-washed” jeans. Ground up pumice stone is sometimes added to toothpaste to act as an abrasive material to scrub teeth.

    Peridotite is sometimes mined for peridot, a type of olivine that is used in jewelry. Diorite was used extensively by ancient civilizations for vases and other decorative artwork and is still used for art today (Figure 9).

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    Figure 9. This diorite statue was made in approximately 2120 BC.

    SEDIMENTARY ROCKS

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    Figure 10. The White House of the USA is made of a sedimentary rock called sandstone.

    The White House (shown in the figure 10) is the official home and workplace of the President of the United States of America. Why do you think the White House is white? If you answered, “Because it is made of white rock,” you would be only partially correct. Construction for the White House began in 1792. Its outside walls are made of the sedimentary rock sandstone. This sandstone is very porous and is easily penetrated by rainwater. Water damage was common in the early days of construction for the building. To stop the water damage, workers covered the sandstone in a mixture of salt, rice, and glue, which help to give the White House its distinctive white color.

    Sediments

    Sandstone is one of the common types of sedimentary rocks that form from sediments. There are many other types. Sediments may include:

    • fragments of other rocks that often have been worn down into small pieces, such as sand, silt, or clay.
    • organic materials, or the remains of once-living organisms.
    • chemical precipitates, which are materials that get left behind after the water evaporates from a solution.

    Rocks at the surface undergo mechanical and chemical weathering. These physical and chemical processes break rock into smaller pieces. Physical weathering simply breaks the rocks apart. Chemical weathering dissolves the less stable minerals. These original elements of the minerals end up in solution and new minerals may form. Sediments are removed and transported by water, wind, ice, or gravity in a process called erosion (figure 11). Much more information about weathering can be found in the “Weathering and Formation of Soil” chapter. Erosion is described in detail in the “Erosion and Deposition” chapter.

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    Figure 11. Water erodes the land surface in Alaska’s Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes.

    Streams carry huge amounts of sediment (figure 12). The more energy the water has, the larger the particle it can carry. A rushing river on a steep slope might be able to carry boulders. As this stream slows down, it no longer has the energy to carry large sediments and will drop them. A slower moving stream will only carry smaller particles.

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    Figure 12. A river dumps sediments along its bed and on its banks.

    Sediments are deposited on beaches and deserts, at the bottom of oceans, and in lakes, ponds, rivers, marshes, and swamps. Avalanches drop large piles of sediment. Glaciers leave large piles of sediments, too. Wind can only transport sand and smaller particles. The type of sediment that is deposited will determine the type of sedimentary rock that can form. Different colors of sedimentary rock are determined by the environment where they are deposited. Red rocks form where oxygen is present. Darker sediments form when the environment is oxygen poor.

    Sedimentary Rock Formation

    Accumulated sediments harden into rock by lithification, as illustrated in figure 13. Two important steps are needed for sediments to lithify.

    1. Sediments are squeezed together by the weight of overlying sediments on top of them. This is called compaction. Cemented, non-organic sediments become clastic rocks. If organic material is included, they are bioclastic rocks.
    2. Fluids fill in the spaces between the loose particles of sediment and crystallize to create a rock by cementation.

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    Figure 13. This cliff is made of sandstone. Sands were deposited and then lithified.

    The sediment size in clastic sedimentary rocks varies greatly (see table 4).

    Table 4. Sedimentary rock sizes and features
    Rock Sediment Size Other Features
    Conglomerate Large Rounded
    Breccia Large Angular
    Sandstone Sand-sized  
    Slitstone Silt-sized, smaller than sand  
    Shale Clay-sized, smallest  

    When sediments settle out of calmer water, they form horizontal layers. One layer is deposited first, and another layer is deposited on top of it. So each layer is younger than the layer beneath it. When the sediments harden, the layers are preserved. Sedimentary rocks formed by the crystallization of chemical precipitates are called chemical sedimentary rocks. As discussed in the “Earth’s Minerals” chapter, dissolved ions in fluids precipitate out of the fluid and settle out, just like the halite in figure 14.

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    Figure 14. The evaporite, halite, on a cobble from the Dead Sea, Israel.

    Biochemical sedimentary rocks form in the ocean or a salt lake. Living creatures remove ions, such as calcium, magnesium, and potassium, from the water to make shells or soft tissue. When the organism dies, it sinks to the ocean floor to become a biochemical sediment, which may then become compacted and cemented into solid rock (figure 15).

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    Figure 15. Fossils in a biochemical rock, limestone, in the Carmel Formation in Utah.

    Table 5 shows some common types of sedimentary rocks.

    Table 5. Common Sedimentary Rocks
    Picture Rock Name Type of Sedimentary Rock
    Table_1_1 Conglomerate Clastic (fragments of non-organic sediments)
    Table_1_2 Breccia Clastic
    Table_1_3 Sandstone Clastic
    Table_1_4 Siltstone Clastic
    Table_1_5 Shale Clastic
    Table_1_6 Rock Salt Chemical precipitate
    Table_1_7 Gypsum Chemical precipitate
    Table_1_8 Dolostone Chemical precipitate
    Table_1_9 Limestone Bioclastic (sediments from organic materials, or plant or animal remains)
    Table_1_10 Coal Organic

    Uses of Sedimentary Rocks

    Sedimentary rocks are used as building stones, although they are not as hard as igneous or metamorphic rocks. Sedimentary rocks are used in construction. Sand and gravel are used to make concrete; they are also used in asphalt. Many economically valuable resources come from sedimentary rocks. Iron ore and aluminum are two examples.

    METAMORPHIC ROCKS

    In the large outcrop of metamorphic rocks in figure 16, the rocks’ platy appearance is a result of the process metamorphism. Metamorphism is the addition of heat and/or pressure to existing rocks, which causes them to change physically and/or chemically so that they become a new rock. Metamorphic rocks may change so much that they may not resemble the original rock.

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    Figure 16. The platy layers in this large outcrop of metamorphic rock show the effects of pressure on rocks during metamorphism.

    Metamorphism

    Any type of rock—igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic—can become a metamorphic rock. All that is needed is enough heat and/or pressure to alter the existing rock’s physical or chemical makeup without melting the rock entirely. Rocks change during metamorphism because the minerals need to be stable under the new temperature and pressure conditions. The need for stability may cause the structure of minerals to rearrange and form new minerals. Ions may move between minerals to create minerals of different chemical composition. Hornfels, with its alternating bands of dark and light crystals, is a good example of how minerals rearrange themselves during metamorphism. Hornfels is shown in table 6.

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    Figure 17. A foliated metamorphic rock.

    Extreme pressure may also lead to foliation, the flat layers that form in rocks as the rocks are squeezed by pressure (figure 17). Foliation normally forms when pressure is exerted in only one direction. Metamorphic rocks may also be non-foliated. Quartzite and limestone, shown in table 6, are nonfoliated.

    The two main types of metamorphism are both related to heat within Earth:

    1. Regional metamorphism: Changes in enormous quantities of rock over a wide area caused by the extreme pressure from overlying rock or from compression caused by geologic processes. Deep burial exposes the rock to high temperatures.
    2. Contact metamorphism: Changes in a rock that is in contact with magma because of the magma’s extreme heat.

    Table 6 shows some common metamorphic rocks and their original parent rock.

    Table 6.
    Picture Rock Name Type of Metamorphic Rock Comments
    Table_2_1 Slate Foliated Metamorphism of shale
    Table_2_2 Phyllite Foliated Metamorphism of slate, but under greater heat and pressure than slate
    Table_2_3 Schist Foliated Often derived from metamorphism of claystone or shale; metamorphosed under more heat and pressure than phyllite
    Table_2_4 Gneiss Foliated Metamorphism of various different rocks, under extreme conditions of heat and pressure
    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Hornfels Non-foliated Contact metamorphism of various different rock types
    Table_2_6 Quartzite Non-foliated Metamorphism of sandstone
    Table_2_7 Marble Non-foliated Metamorphism of limestone
    Table_2_8 Metaconglomerate Non-foliated Metamorphism of conglomerate

    Uses of Metamorphic Rocks

    Quartzite and marble are commonly used for building materials and artwork. Marble is beautiful for statues and decorative items such as vases (see an example in figure 18). Ground up marble is also a component of toothpaste, plastics, and paper.

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    Figure 18. Marble is used for decorative items and in art.

    Quartzite is very hard and is often crushed and used in building railroad tracks (see figure 19). Schist and slate are sometimes used as building and landscape materials. Graphite, the “lead” in pencils, is a mineral commonly found in metamorphic rocks.

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    Figure 19. Crushed quartzite is sometimes placed under railroad tracks because it is very hard and durable.

    LESSON SUMMARY

    • Igneous rocks form either when they cool very slowly deep within the Earth (intrusive) or when magma cools rapidly at the Earth’s surface (extrusive).
    • Rock may melt to create magma if temperature increases, pressure decreases, or water is added. Different minerals melt at different temperatures.
    • Igneous rocks are classified on their composition and grain size, which indicates whether they are intrusive or extrusive.
    • Weathering and erosion produce sediments. Sediments are transported by water, wind, ice, or gravity.
    • After sediments are deposited, they undergo compaction and/or cementation to become sedimentary rocks.
    • Biochemical sedimentary rocks form when living creatures using ions in water to create shells, bones, or soft tissue die and fall to the bottom as sediments.
    • Metamorphic rocks form when heat and pressure transform an existing rock into a new rock.
    • Contact metamorphism occurs when hot magma transforms the rock that it contacts.
    • Regional metamorphism transforms large areas of existing rocks under the tremendous heat and pressure created by geologic processes.

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