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Origin of Rocks • Rocks are classified by the way they are formed. • Igneous rocks: formed from the cooling of molten rock. • Sedimentary rocks: formed from sediments being compacted and cemented. • Metamorphic rocks: existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure, or chemical reactions. Igneous Rocks • Classified by origin, texture (crystal size), and mineral composition. • From the Latin word “ignis,” which means fire. Extrusive Igneous Rock Extrusive rock is formed from lava that erupted on the surface and rapidly cooled. Will have tiny crystals, be very fine grained, and sometimes even appear glassy. Basalt is most common of this type. Basalt Forming What type of lava is this? How do you know? Intrusive Igneous Rock • Forms when magma cools underground. • Usually cools slowly, so it will have large crystals and be coarse grained. • Granite is most common intrusive rock. Explain This! • How would you explain an intrusive rock that had both large and small crystals? • It must have cooled slowly at first, then cooled more rapidly as it got closer to the surface. Porphyritic Rock • Deep underground the heat cannot dissipate as rapidly, so the rock cools slowly. Near the surface the heat can escape into the air, so it cools rapidly. Metamorphic Rocks • “Meta” is ancient Greek for change. • “Morph” is ancient Greek for form. • Metamorphic rock then is rock that has changed from one form to another. How Metamorphic Rocks Form • Deep below the Earth’s surface the intense heat and pressure can change rocks. • Their appearance, texture, crystal structure and mineral content can change. • Fossils will be destroyed. How Does Metamorphism Happen? CONTACT metamorphism: • Rocks are heated by contact with magma/lava • Affects small areas • Usually occurs along the edges of igneous intrusions How Does Metamorphism Happen? REGIONAL metamorphism – Rocks deeply buried are changed by heat and pressure – Affects large areas – Often occurs along plate boundaries • These rocks started out as some other type of rock, but have been greatly changed from their original igneous, sedimentary, or earlier metamorphic form. • Metamorphic rocks form when rocks are subjected to high heat, high pressure, hot, mineral-rich fluids or, more commonly, some combination of these factors. Metamorphic Changes Almost melted! • Metamorphic rocks are often squished, smeared out, and folded. • Despite these conditions, metamorphic rocks do not get hot enough to melt, or they would become igneous rocks. Classifying Metamorphic Rock • Classified by the arrangement of the grains. • Foliated • Non-foliated Foliated Metamorphic Rock • Grains are in parallel layers or bands. • “Foliated” is the Latin word for leaf. • Describes the thin layering found in many metamorphic rocks. • These rocks will split along these bands. Slate • Formed when shale is subjected to pressure. • Denser, more compacted than shale. • Produces flat plates when broken. Slate to Schist • If slate is subjected to even greater pressure and moderate temperatures, schist is formed. Granite to Gneiss • Granite becomes gneiss when subjected to heat and pressure. • The atoms end up lining up in bands. Non-foliated Metamorphic Rock • Mineral grains are randomized. • Do not split into layers. • Usually smoother and denser than the parent rock. Quartzite • Occurs when sandstone is compressed by pressure. • Usually very hard. • Formed from metamorphed limestone. • Much harder and denser. Marble Origin of Rocks • Rocks are classified by the way they are formed. • Igneous rocks: formed from the cooling of molten rock. • Sedimentary rocks: formed from sediments being compacted and cemented. • Metamorphic rocks: existing rock that is changed by heat, pressure, or chemical reactions. Sedimentary Rocks • Formed from particles deposited by wind and water. • Sediment is small pieces of solid materials that come from rocks or living things. • What do these rocks have in common? Stratification • These rocks are layered or “stratified.” • This feature is also called “Bedding” Weathering, Erosion, Transportation • Occurs when water, wind, ice, chemicals, or organic processes loosens rock and soil and some mechanism carries it away. Deposition • The process by which the sediment settles out of the water or air carrying it. • Sediment is deposited when the wind or water speed decreases. Graded Bedding • Explain how this could have occurred. Graded Bedding • Explain this. Cross Bedding Wind-deposited cross bedding Water-deposited cross bedding Explain these. Ever see these before? Formation of Ripple Marks What are these? What are these? Burial and Compaction • As the sediments settle they will loosely fit on top of each other. • As the years go by, more and more sediment is added. • The bottom layers get compacted by the weight of the layers above them. • Water is often squeezed out. Cementation While compaction is going on, minerals in the rock slowly dissolve. The dissolved minerals seep into the spaces between the compacted sediment as the water is squeezed out. They crystallize and glue the sediments together. Lithification • The process by which sediment becomes sedimentary rock. – – – – – – – Weathering Erosion Transportation Deposition Burial Compaction Cementation Types of sedimentary rocks • Clastic: sediments made of broken fragments • Coarse-grained rocks-fast moving water, rockfalls, landslides. • Medium-grained rock: streams, rivers, shorelines. • Sandstone, arkose Fine-grained rocks • Shale, siltstone, mudstone • Ponds, swamps • very slow-moving water Chemical and Biochemical sedrocks. • Chemical – Precipitates-rocks that have a sediment derived from minerals that have precipitated out of a solution. – Calcareous Tufa, Chemical Limestone, stalagmites and stalactites. – Evaporites-water that contains dissolved minerals evaporate and leave behind the minerals which can accumulate at the bed. – Halite, gypsum, some types of limestone Biochemical • Rocks formed from the remains of living organisms. • Coquina • Bituminous coal • Fossiliferous limestone • Certain types of chalk