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Chapter 3 Rocks Rocks • Rock – any solid mass of mineral or mineral-like matter that occurs naturally as part of our planet – Usually solid mixtures of minerals – Some composed of just one mineral – Each mineral retains its properties in mixture The Rock Cycle • Three Major Types – Igneous – Sedimentary – Metamorphic • Interactions among three things cause rocks to change from one type to another: – Water – Air – Land • Rock cycle – continuous processes of rocks changing The Rock Cycle – Igneous Rocks • Magma – molten material that forms beneath Earth’s surface • Lava – magma that reaches the surface • Igneous rocks – Form when magma cools and hardens beneath surface -OR– Volcanic eruption The Rock Cycle – Sedimentary Rocks • Weathering – rocks are physically and chemically broken down by water, air, living things. • Sediments – weathered pieces of earth materials – Moved by water, gravity, glaciers, wind • Sedimentary rocks formed by: – Sediments being compacted and cemented The Rock Cycle – Metamorphic Rock • Sedimentary rock – buried deep within Earth – Exposed to increased pressure and temp • Metamorphic rock formed: – Sedimentary rock exposed to extreme pressure and temp • When metamorphic rocks exposed to additional pressure or higher temps: – Melt to form magma -> eventually crystallizes to form igneous rock again Alternate Paths • Igneous Rock: – Some remains deeply buried: exposed to strong forces & increased temp – becomes metamorphic rock – If pressure & temp high enough – could melt and reform igneous • Metamorphic and sedimentary: – Could weather to become sediments again – Then become sedimentary rocks again Energy • Igneous & metamorphic rocks – Both driven by heat from Earth’s interior • Sedimentary rocks – Weathering and movement of weathered materials – External processes powered by energy from the sun Dynamic Rock Cycle Igneous Rocks • Different kinds of igneous rock form when magma and lava cool and harden – Intrusive – Extrusive Intrusive Igneous Rocks • Form when magma hardens beneath Earth’s surface – Intrude into existing rocks – Common rock: granite Extrusive Igneous Rocks • Form when lava hardens – They are extruded onto the surface – Common: rhyolite Classification of Igneous Rocks • Two main characteristics: – Texture • Size • Shape • Interlocking crystals – Composition • light vs. dark minerals Igneous Rocks – Texture 1. Coarse-grained – Slow cooling results in formation of large crystals 2. Fine-grained – Rapid cooling results in small, interconnected mineral grains Igneous Rocks – Texture 3. Glassy – – Formed when ions in lava do not have enough time to arrange themselves in network of crystals Ex. – obsidian, pumice Porphyritic – (large crystals surrounded by fine-grained minerals) 4. – Formed when minerals that crystallize from magma do not form at same rate or same time Igneous Rocks – Composition 1. Granitic Composition • • • Light-colored silicate minerals Major rocks of continental crust – 70% silica Ex – rhyolite: extrusive granitic rock 2. Basaltic Composition • • • • Dark silicate minerals & plagioclase feldspar Rich in iron and magnesium Darker and denser than granitic rocks Ex – basalt, gabbro Igneous Rocks - Composition 3. Other Compositional Groups • Andesitic composition – between granitic and basaltic rocks • • • common volcanic rock – andesite 25% dark silicate minerals Peridotite – much of upper mantle • • Ultramafic – composed mostly of dark minerals Rare at Earth’s surface Sedimentary Rocks • Form when existing rocks broken down into sediments 1. Weathering - any process that breaks rocks into sediment 2. Erosion – water, wind, ice, gravity 3. Deposition – loses energy, drops sediment • • Sediments deposited according to size Largest deposited first – smallest deposited last Sedimentary Rocks • Processes that change sediments into sedimentary rocks: 1. Compaction – squeezes, or compacts sediments • Much of the water is driven out 2. Cementation – dissolved minerals deposited in tiny spaces among sediments Classification of Sedimentary Rocks • Classified into two groups according to the way they form: 1. Clastic sedimentary rocks – rocks made of weathered bits of rocks and minerals – Conglomerate – gravel-sized or larger particles make up most of rock – Breccia – angular particles – Sandstone – sand-size grains Classification of Sedimentary Rocks 2. Chemical and biochemical sedimentary rocks – Dissolved minerals precipitate from water solutions – Occurs when water evaporates or boils off, leaving a solid product – Limestones, rock salt, chert, flint, rock gypsum 90 % of limestones formed from biochemical sediments Shells and skeletal remains of organisms on ocean floor Features – Sedimentary Rocks • Can give clues to how, when, and where rocks formed 1. Each layer: records a period of sediment deposition • Oldest layers found at bottom 2. Ripple marks: rock formed along beach or stream bed 3. Mud cracks: record of a dry environment 4. Fossils: answer questions about rocks – – – Did rock form on land or ocean? Was climate hot or cold? Match rocks from different places (compare age) Metamorphic Rocks • Existing rocks are changed by heat and pressure – Conditions are a few km below surface and extend into the upper mantle Two Types of Metamorphism 1. Contact metamorphism: hot magma moves into rock • • Low-grade metamorphism Marble – forms from limestone Two Types of Metamorphism 2. Regional Metamorphism • • During mountain building, large areas of rock subjected to extreme pressures and temps High-grade metamorphism Agents of Metamorphism 1. Heat – most important agent • • • Comes from two sources: magma and change in temp with depth Provides energy to drive chemical reactions Minerals are stable at different temps 2. Pressure (Stress) • • • Increases with depth Pressure on rocks from within Earth comes from all directions Causes rocks to flow, not fracture • Minerals flatten and elongate Agents of Metamorphism 3. Hydrothermal Solutions • • When solutions increase in temp, reactions among substances occur at a faster rate Promote recrystallization by dissolving original minerals and depositing new ones Classification of Metamorphic Rocks 1. Foliated • • • Some minerals recrystallize at right angles to the direction of force Gives rock a layered or banded appearance Ex: shale – slate – schist – gneiss Foliated Metamorphic Shale Slate Schist Gneiss Classification of Metamorphic Rocks 2. Nonfoliated: • Does not have banded texture • Most only contain one mineral • Limestone (made of calcite) - marble limestone marble