CLASSIFICATION OF IGNEOUS ROCKS

Igneous rocks classified on the basis of CRYSTAL SIZE and SILICA CONTENT

CRYSTAL SIZE

GlassyFineMediumCoarse

No xlsunder 1mm1-2mmover 2mm

microscopehandlensnaked eye

ObsidianRhyoliteMicrograniteGranite

AndesiteMicrodioriteDiorite

BasaltDoleriteGabbro

SILICA CONTENT / MINERALOGY (and colour)

'ACID' - rich in silica 60-70%

Light coloured = LEUCOCRATIC

Low density

Rich in FELSIC/SILICIC minerals

30% QUARTZ, 45% ORTHOCLASE FELDSPAR,

15% PLAGIOCLASE FELDSPAR (ALBITE; Na rich)

10% MICAS + AMPHIBOLES (eg Hornblende)

eg Granite, Microgranite, Rhyolite

'INTERMEDIATE' - 56-59% silica

Medium coloured MESOCRATIC

70% PLAGIOCLASE FELDSPAR (ANDESINE roughly equal Na/Ca)

30% AMPHIBOLE + PYROXENE + BIOTITE MICA

eg Andesite, Microdiorite, Diorite

'BASIC’ - low in silica 45-55%

Dark coloured MELANOCRATIC

High density

Rich in MAFIC/FERROMAGNESIAN minerals

40% PYROXENES (eg Augite)

60%PLAGIOCLASE FELDSPAR (LABRADORITE Ca rich)

eg Basalt, Dolerite, Gabbro

'ULTRABASIC' - under 45% silica

50% PYROXENE, 50%OLIVINE

eg Peridotite

SEE IGNEOUS ROCK CLASSIFICATION SHEET

IGNEOUS ROCK TEXTURES

V fast cooling of acidic magma: no crystals form: GLASSY texture eg OBSIDIAN

Glass altered by DEVITRIFICATION has a SPHERULITIC texture eg 'SNOWFLAKE OBSIDIAN', often with curving cracks or PERLITIC TEXTURE

Fast cooling eg lava at surface, small/shallow intrusions

- finely crystalline, poorly formed = ANHEDRAL

Slow cooling eg large pluton/batholith intrusions

- coarsely crystalline, well formed = EUHEDRAL

Uninterrupted, steady cooling- EQUIGRANULAR texture

Interrupted ie 2 stage cooling ega) migration of magma from pluton to dyke/sill

b) eruption from magma chamber to surface PORPHYRITIC texture

- large, usually euhedral PHENOCRYSTS: slow cooling of large magma body at depth

- fine GROUNDMASS: faster cooling in smaller/shallower magma body or at surface

INTERGROWTH TEXTURES

GRAPHIC - intergrowth of quartz and orthoclase feldspar, probably the result of crystallisation of acidic magma at or near to the eutectic point (looks like angular writing)

GRANOPHYRIC - small scale graphic texture

POIKILITIC- small crystals enclosed in larger ones eg small crystals of olivine enclosed in larger amphiboles

OPHITIC - small euhedral plagioclase feldspar crystals enclosed by large pyroxenes; common in dolerites

REACTION TEXTURES

ZONED CRYSTALS - Common in plagioclase feldspars; Ca rich core, Na rich rim due to d cooling preventing completion of reaction of early formed crystal with melt

CORONA STRUCTURE - Olivine core surrounded by Pyroxene, surrounded by Amphibole; formed by reaction of early formed crystals with melt

LAVA TEXTURES

VESICULAR - bubbles caused by gas coming out of solution due to release of pressure when lava is erupted; may be elongated in direction of flow

AMYGDALOIDAL - vesicles infilled with minerals eg calcite, quartz, agate

DESCRIBING IGNEOUS ROCKS

THE OUTCROP

1Location and general form of outcrop; sketch if appropriate

2Orientation and spacing of joints

3Relationship with veins, dykes, sills; apply law of cross cutting relationships

4Nature of contact with surrounding rocks

THE HAND SPECIMEN

1Weathered surface; texture, colour eg rusty indicates oxidation of iron rich pyroxenes and olivines in basic rocks

2Collect representative samples ie average and variations

3Colour of fresh surface; Leucocratic/ Mesocratic/ Melanocratic

4Relative density

5Use HANDLENS + GRAINSIZE CARD (or ruler!) to observe and record

TEXTURE (SIZE/ SHAPE/ARRANGEMENT of crystals)

a)crystal size (in mm as well as glassy/ fine/ medium/ coarse)

b)crystal shape (euhedral / anhedral)

c)Crystal arrangement (equigranular/ porphyritic/ flow banded)

d)Presence of vesicles/ amygadales

6Estimate number and proportions of different minerals present

Record mineral colour, cleavage, lustre, crystal shape,hardness where possible

Suggest identification of minerals based on observations/tests

FELSIC MINERALS

QUARTZ; colourless/grey, no cleavage, vitreous lustre, usually anhedral, harder than 5.5

ORTHOCLASE FELDSPAR; orange/pink, 2 poor cleavages at 90', dull/vitreous lustre, rectangular 'lath' shaped crystals (may show simple twinning) harder than 5.5

PLAGIOCLASE FELDSPAR; white/grey, 2 poor cleavages at 90', dull/vitreous lustre, rectangular 'lath' shaped crystals (May show multiple twinning), harder than 5.5

MUSCOVITE MICA; white/silver, 1 perfect cleavage (flakes), vitreous lustre, tabular crystals, hardness >2.5 <3.5

MAFIC MINERALS

Very difficult to identify with certainty!

PYROXENE; black anhedral crystals

AMPHIBOLE; greenish black (not as dark as pyroxene) anhedral crystals

OLIVINE; olive green, poor cleavage, vitreous lustre, anhedral crystals, harder than 5.5

BIOTITE MICA; black/brown, 1 perfect cleavage (flakes), vitreous lustre, tabular crystals, hardness >2.5 <3.5

ESTA GEOTREX The Geology Teachers Resource Exchange Contributor: Ben Church
Establishment: MonmouthComprehensiveSchool Date:24:05:05