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Dr. Helen Lang Dept. p of Geology gy & Geography g p y West Virginia University SPRING 2009 GEOLOGY 585: Optical Mineralogy & Petrology Overview of Igneous Rocks Igneous rocks crystallize from magmas andd most magmas are silicate ili magmas (containing 40 to 75 wt.% SiO2) • Felsic (silicic or sialic) magmas are high in SiO2 and Al2O3 and low in MgO and FeO • Intermediate magmas are between Felsic and Mafic magmas • Mafic magmas contain less than 50 wt.% SiO2 and d higher hi h MgO, M O F FeO O and dF Fe2O3 • Ultramafic magmas are even more SiO2 poor and MgO/FeO rich Classification and Naming of Igneous Rocks • Based on Felsic Mineral Content – QAPF or Streckeisen Diagram • For fine-grained volcanic rocks, naming is b d on chemical based h i l composition iti (plot ( l t Na2O+K2O vs. SiO2) Streckeisen (QAPF) Diagram with Plutonic Igneous Rock names IUGS Volcanic Classification is Graphical Alkaline Subalkaline Q/Q Q+A+P How to plot on the Streckeisen Diagram Note that several fields contain 2 or 3 names, names which do you use? F/F+A+P Diorite Di it has h C.I. C I < 35 andd Na-rich plagioclase with An<50 Gabbro has C.I. >35 and Ca-rich plagioclase with An>50 Anorthosite has >90% plagioclase (<10% mafic fi minerals) i l) Bowen’ss Reaction Series Bowen • Idealized model for crystallization of magmas • Shows order in which minerals crystallize from a typical mafic or basaltic magma • Left side is called Discontinuous Side – Mafic minerals change abruptly • Right side is called Continuous Side – Plagioclase changes composition gradually Bowen’s Reaction Series hi T olivine Ca plagioclase orthopyroxene tempperature clinopyroxene NaCa plagioclase amphibole (Hb) biotite Na plagioclase cooling alkali feldspar muscovite low T quartz residual phases We’ll We ll start with Olivine • Formula: (Mg (Mg, Fe)2SiO4 • An Isolated Tetrahedral Silicate • complete solid solution with two endmembers: b – Mg2SiO4 Forsterite (Fo) and – Fe2SiO4 Fayalite y ((Fa)) Olivine Properties • • • • • Vitreous luster Olive green color Olive-green No ggood cleavages g H=6.5 G=3.2 Optical: high relief, moderately high birefringence Olivine Xenoliths from the Mantle Olivine in thin section Pyroxenes • Common in mafic and intermediate igneous rocks, typically crystallize from basalt after Olivine (BRS) • Single Chain Silicates • General Formula: ((Ca2+,,Mgg2+,,Fe2+)2Si2O6 • Two kinds: – Orthopyroxenes (Opx) (Mg,Fe)2Si2O6 are orthorhombic and have perpendicular axes, low birefringence, // ext. • Enstatite – Clinopyroxenes (Cpx) Ca(Mg,Fe)Si2O6 are monoclinic and have one inclined axis, higher biref., inclined ext. • Augite and Diopside Pyroxene Relief, Color and Cleavage in PPL Orthopyroxene Properties • Orthopyroxenes (enstatite, hypersthene, bronzite) – Color gray, bronze, brown – Colorless to tan in thin section – High relief – Low birefringence – Parallel extinction Clinopyroxene Properties • Diopside (more likely in metamorphic rocks) – Ca~1Mg~1Si2O6 – Color light green – Colorless in thin section – Moderate birefringence, g , inclined extinction • Augite Ca~1(Mg,Fe)~1Si2O6 (typical igneous Cpx) – Dark green to black – Tan, light brown or green in thin section – Moderate birefringence, inclined extinction Augite (moderate birefringence, twinning and cleavage) Hornblende (Hb) • is the main amphibole in igneous rocks • crystallizes after olivine and pyroxenes from mafic magmas, and at lower temperature • is most common in intermediate composition igneous rocks • double-chain d bl h i silicate ili t Hornblende • General Amphibole Formula: – (Na,K)0-1(Ca,Na,Fe,Mg)2(Mg,Fe,Al)5(Si,Al)8O22(OH)2 – large g medium small tetrahedral cations • Simple Amphibole (Tremolite): – _Ca Ca2Mg5Si8O22(OH)2 • Hornblende Formula: – (Ca,Na)2-3(Mg,Fe,Al)5Si6(Si,Al)2O22(OH)2 – Substitution of (Alvi, Aliv) for (Mgvi, Siiv) of tremolite Hornblende Properties • • • • Black or dark green Vitreous luster, translucent H=5-6 H 56 G=3 G 3.00-3 3.55 two perfect prismatic cleavages at about 60o and 120o to eachother, eachother sometimes “splintery” splintery cleavage • commonly in prisms with flattened hexagonal cross-sections i Hornblende’ss Optical Properties Hornblende • Various shades of brown, red-brown, green, bl blue-green or tan in i thin hi section i • Moderate to strong pleochroism is typical • Moderate birefringence, commonly obscured by its color • Two good cleavages at ~60o and 120o to eachother • You have to be looking down the prism to see 2 crossing sets of cleavages, in many views i you will ill see only l one sett off cleavages l Igneous Amphiboles Big Hornblende Bi H bl d Crystals C l in i this hi fine-grained fi i d volcanic rock are called Phenocrysts Hb cleavage, color & pleochroism Kaersutite (Na,Ti-rich (Na,Ti rich igneous amphibole) with i h strong red-brown db pleochroism l h i Biotite is the lowest Mafic Mineral on Di Discontinuous ti Side Sid off Bowen’s B ’ Series S i • IIt crystallizes lli very late l from f fractionated f i d mafic fi magmas and is only common in intermediate to f l i magmas, H2O must bbe present ffor Bi felsic Biotite i to crystallize • Biotite is a trioctahedral, t-o-t (or 2:1) sheet silicate • Biotite’s properties: it’s strongly pleochroic, has cleavage, g , pparallel extinction,, bird’s-eye y extinction and pleochroic haloes around zircon Muscovite is a Residual Phase on BRS • Crystallizes only from felsic magmas with H2O in the liquid • Structure and properties are similar to biotite, except for color and pleochroism • Common C iin Granites G i andd Pegmatites P i Felsic Minerals on BRS hi T olivine Ca plagioclase orthopyroxene tempperature clinopyroxene NaCa plagioclase amphibole (Hb) biotite Na plagioclase cooling alkali feldspar muscovite low T quartz residual phases Quartz Properties • H=7 H 7, G=2 G 2.65 65 • Generally clear and glassy, may have a variety of colors (clear, (clear smoky, smoky brown, brown rose; it’s allochromatic) • Conchoidal C h id l fracture, f no cleavage l • Habit: hexagonal (6-sided prisms) or massive • Optical: p low relief and low birefringence g Quartz in Granite Thin Section PPL XPL From Atlas of Rocks & Minerals in Thin Section The Feldspar Ternary C Al2Si2O8 CaAl Anorthite solid solutions All natural f ld feldspars No feldspars Miscibility Gap Albite NaAlSi3O8 alkali feldspars Orthoclase O th l KAlSi3O8 Alkali Feldspar (esp (esp. Orthoclase) Properties • H=6, G=2.56 • Generally turbid (cloudy); color white, white pink or flesh-colored • 2 Perfect to good perpendicular cleavages • Habit: stubby prisms, simple twins common • Optical: low relief and low birefringence y Perthitic ((micro and macro)) • Commonly Alkali Feldspars p have Perthites What do Perthites look like? Thin section in XPL Alkali Feldspars have Perthites What do Perthites look like? 1mm What causes Perthites? • Caused by un-mixing, exsolution or separation p of Na+ ((diameter~1.1Å)) and K+ (diameter~1.6Å) as the feldspar cools • At low temperatures, there is a miscibility gap between NaAlSi3O8 and KAlSi3O8 Microcline has plaid twinning 1mm Plagioclase Properties • • • • • • • • H 6-6.5, H=6-6 5 G G=2 2.62-2.76 62-2 76 (Or H=6, H=6 G=2 G=2.56) 56) Luster pearly, vitreous/translucent C l white Color hi to gray One perfect, one good cleavage Optical: low relief and low birefringence Polysynthetic albite twinning usually present Not Perthitic! C Commonly l zoned d May y be viisible iin hand dspeccimen, usuallly visible in thin sectio on (XP PL) Plagioclase Feldspars have ( l (polysynthetic, th ti lamellar) l ll ) Albite Albit Twins T i Minerals of Pegmatites Large crystals of Quartz, Alkali Feldspar and Muscovite (which are low on Bowen’s Reaction Series) Pegmatites are rich in Incompatible Elements and Volatiles • Incompatible Elements – those elements that don don’tt fit well in common igneous minerals (Li, B, Be) • Volatiles V l il – those h elements l that h have h a strong preference for the gaseous phase (H2O, O CO2, Cl, Cl F, F S) Phase Diagrams tell MUCH more about Crystallization and Melting than Bowen’s Bowen s Reaction Series • What follows is just a quick preview of g pphase diagrams g can be some of the things used for • We We’ll ll look at two really simple examples How do we use this diagram to tell about crystallization of basalt? Diopside-rich li id (X) liquid 80% CaMgSi2O6 (Di) 20% % CaAl2Si2O8 ((An)) Draw isopleth= line of constant composition What happens as liquid cools? Anorthite-rich liquid q ((Y)) 65% CaAl2Si2O8 (An) 35% CaMgSi2O6 (Di) Y X Textures of rocks in Di-An System 2-component system with Complete Solid Solution Crystallization of Plagioclase in Basalts (real i igneous plagioclase l i l is not pure An like in the Di Di-An An system) Pyroxene Compositions and the P Pyroxene Q Quadrilateral d il l Diopside CaMgSi2O6 Enstatite Mg2Si2O6 clinopyroxenes Augite Orthopyroxene py orthopyroxenes Hedenbergite CaFeSi2O6 Ferrosilite Fe2Si2O6