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ROCKS

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ROCKS Bell Ringer: Rocks What is the difference between intrusive and extrusive igneous rocks? T or F: Intrusive igneous rocks are composed of larger crystals then ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ROCKS


1
ROCKS
2
Rock Vocabulary
  • Sediment
  • Rock cycle
  • Weathering
  • Stratification
  • Igneous rock
  • Sedimentary rock
  • Metamorphic rock
  • Cementation
  • Porphyritic texture
  • Intrusive igneous rock
  • Extrusive igneous rock
  • Conglomerate
  • Fossil
  • Ripple mark (look in chapter in sedimentary rock
    section)

3
What is a rock?
4
What is a rock?
  • Maybe made of entirely one mineral or several
    minerals.
  • May contain organic matter (composed of living
    material, usually carbon based)
  • Rocks containing varied chemical compositions of
    the same mineral can be different.

5
Forms of the same mineral
  • Example Carbon may be found as a lump of coal or
    as a diamond. Quite different!

DIAMOND
COAL
6
Types of Rocks
  • What are the three classes of rocks?

7
Types of Rocks
  • What are the three classes of rocks?
  • 1. Igneous Rocks
  • 2. Sedimentary Rocks
  • 3. Metamorphic Rocks

8
Igneous Rocks
  • Name comes from the Latin word ignis meaning
    from fire.
  • Formed when super hot magma or lava cools.
  • There are seven different classes based on
    chemical composition of the igneous rock.

9
Types of Igneous Rocks
  • Extrusive Igneous Rocks
  • Formed from lava that quickly solidifies at the
    cooler surface.
  • Produces fine-grained rocks.
  • Ex. basalt and rhyolite

david-amador.com
geology.com
10
Igneous Rock
  • The most common known igneous rock is granite.
  • It is composed almost entirely of feldspar and
    quartz

11
Types of Igneous Rocks
  • Intrusive Igneous Rocks
  • Trapped magma under the crust solidifies slowly.
  • Intrusive rocks are composed of larger crystals
    because form slower.
  • Larger crystals give these rocks a rougher
    texture
  • Ex. granite
  • Mount Rushmore is carved from granite in the
    Black Hills of South Dakota.

Mount Rushmore is carved from granite in the
Black Hills of South Dakota.
12
Igneous Rocks Mafic vs. Felsic
  • Felsic chemically composed of potassium,
    feldspar, and large amounts of quartz.
  • Mafic chemically composed of iron and
    magnesium, and smaller amounts of quartz.

csmres.jmu.edu
13
Bell Ringer Rocks
  • What is the difference between intrusive and
    extrusive igneous rocks?
  • T or F Intrusive igneous rocks are composed
    of larger crystals then extrusive igneous rocks.
  • Would mafic or felsic magma be magnetic? Explain
    your answer.

14
Igneous Rock Formations
  • Extrusive Igneous Structues
  • volcanoes
  • Intrusive Igenous Structures
  • batholiths
  • laccoliths
  • sills
  • dikes

indiana.edu
15
Sedimentary Rocks
  • All sedimentary rocks are made of materials
    called sediments deposited by natural and
    chemical processes.
  • Sediments become cemented or compacted together
    over time forming a solid rock

Uluru (Ayers Rock) in Australia, the world's
largest monolith, is made of sandstone.
16
Types of Sediments
  • Tiny grains of sand
  • Broken pieces of rock along the bottom of a
    stream
  • Fragments of seashells
  • Layers of mud
  • Organic matter (plant and animal remains)

17
Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks
  • Gravity, water, or wind carries them to a
    destination.
  • Sediments deposit in layers over time. (strata
    layers)
  • Loosely deposited sediments eventually form a
    solid rock by
  • 1.Compaction sediments squeezed together by
    gravity/pressure.
  • 2. Cementation sediments glued together by
    minerals deposited by water.

18
Sedimentary Rock
  • The most common sedimentary rock is limestone.
  • Develops from living remains (shells, mollusks)
  • Coal is another example of a sedimentary rock
    derived from organic remains.

19
Sedimentary Rock
Ripple marks formed in the sand by wind
  • Often preserve some characteristics from which
    they were formed.
  • Ripple marks formed in the sand will appear in
    the rock formed from the sand deposits.

20
Sedimentary Rocks
  • The source of most fossil remains.
  • The age of a rock can be determined by studying
    the fossils within it.(Radiometric Dating)
  • Identify when prehistoric organisms and
    vegetation thrived and became extinct.

Fossilized Leaves
21
Sedimentary Rocks
  • The diverse colors within the sedimentary layers
    (strata) gives scientists an idea of their
    chemical make-up.
  • The red and pink bands in the Grand Canyon
    exhibit the iron found in the sediment.

22
Sedimentary Rocks Location
  • Sedimentary rocks cover almost all of the ocean
    floor and about three-fourths of Earth's surface
    land area.

23
Metamorphic Rock
  • Metamorphism change in the chemical make-up of
    rocks
  • Heat, pressure, and hot fluids cause rocks to
    change into other rocks.
  • Where would this most likely occur?

24
Metamorphic Rock
  • Heat, pressure, and hot fluids cause rocks to
    change into other rocks.
  • Where would this most likely occur? within the
    Earth
  • at subduction zones

25
Metamorphic Rock
Formed from compression of Tectonic plates
The geologic processes that created the North
Cascades changed the original rock into
metamorphic rock.
26
Classes of Metamorphic Rocks
  • Foliated Metamorphic Rocks
  • Minerals are arranged
  • in planes or bands.
  • Metamorphism is slow.
  • Non-Foliate Metamorphic Rocks
  • Minerals are not arranged
  • in bands or planes.
  • Metamorphism occurs fast.

volcano.oregonstate.edu
brhectorsgeoworld.blogspot.com
27
Types of Metamorphic Rock
  • Slate is a common form that is easily split into
    slabs
  • Gneiss (pronounced nice) contains light and
    dark bands
  • Granite is also a common type

28
The Rock Cycle
  • Almost all of the rock that we have on Earth
    today is made of the same stuff as the rocks that
    dinosaurs and other ancient life forms walked,
    crawled, or swam over. While the stuff that rocks
    are made from has stayed the same, the rocks
    themselves, have not. Over time rocks are
    recycled into other rocks.

29
The Rock Cycle
30
The Rock Cycle
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