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Rocks: Mineral mixtures

Rocks: Mineral mixtures. Rocks. Rock – A solid mixture of one or more minerals. The Rock Cycle. The process by which one rock type changes into another. http://www.learner.org/interactives/rockcycle/. Sedimentary Rocks. Rocks that form when sediments are compacted and cemented together. .

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Rocks: Mineral mixtures

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  1. Rocks: Mineral mixtures

  2. Rocks • Rock – A solid mixture of one or more minerals.

  3. The Rock Cycle • The process by which one rock type changes into another. http://www.learner.org/interactives/rockcycle/

  4. Sedimentary Rocks • Rocks that form when sediments are compacted and cemented together.

  5. Metamorphic Rocks • Rocks that forms when the texture and composition of a preexisting rock changes by heat and pressure produced deep within the Earth.

  6. Igneous Rocks • Rocks that form from cooling of magma and lava both inside and on the surface of the Earth.

  7. Composition • The minerals a rock is made of determines its composition. • Example – Granite typically has 10% Biotitie Mica, 35% Quartz and 55% Feldspar. • However, there are classifications of Granites that have different amounts of each of these minerals.

  8. Composition cont.

  9. Texture • The texture of a rock is determined by the sizes, shapes and positions of the grains which it is made of. • Fine grained – silt or clay particles • Medium Grained – sand • Coarse Grained - pebbles

  10. Fine Grained Fine grained siltstone

  11. Medium Grained Medium grained Sandstone

  12. Coarse Grained Coarse Grained Conglomerate

  13. Igneous Rocks • Rocks formed when magma and lava solidify • Igneous comes from the Latin word for “fire”. • Intrusive – igneous rocks from when magma cools below the Earth’s surface. • Extrusive – igneous rocks that form from lava cooling on the surface of the Earth

  14. Intrusive, or plutonic, igneous rocks form when magma cools slowly below the Earth's surface. Most intrusive rocks have large, well-formed crystals. Examples include granite, gabbro, and diorite.

  15. Extrusive igneous rocks form when magma reaches the Earth's surface cooling quickly to form lava. Most extrusive (volcanic) rocks have small crystals. Examples include basalt, rhyolite, and andesite.

  16. Mafic Rocks • Mafic is used for silicate minerals, magmas, and rocks which are relatively high in the heavier elements. The term is derived from using the MA from magnesium and the FIC from the Latin word for iron. Mafic minerals are usually dark in color and have relatively high specific gravities

  17. Felsic Rocks • Felsic, is used for silicate minerals, magmas, and rocks which have a lower percentage of the heavier elements, and are correspondingly enriched in the lighter elements, such as silica and oxygen, aluminum, and potassium. The term comes from FEL for feldspar and SIC, which indicates the higher percentage of silica.

  18. Intrusive igneous rocks are dense and hard and withstand weathering and erosion well.

  19. Sedimentary rock Formation • Sedimentary rock – grains of sand and sediment are eroded by weathering forming thick layers that are eventually cemented together. • They are commonly formed on the ocean floor and other low areas. • The most common rock found on the Earth’s surface

  20. Weathering

  21. Deposition

  22. Forming the ocean floor

  23. Limestone rocks are sedimentary rocks that are made from the mineral calcite which came from the beds of evaporated seas and lakes and from sea animal shells. This rock is used in concrete and is an excellent building stone for humid regions.

  24. Conglomerate rocks are sedimentary rocks. They are made up of large sediments like sand and pebbles. The sediment is so large that pressure alone cannot hold the rock together; it is also cemented together with dissolved minerals.

  25. Grand Canyon

  26. Painted Desert

  27. Metamorphic Rocks • Metamorphic rocks are formed deep within the Earth. • “Meta” in Latin means change. “Morph” in Latin means shape. • Thus, metamorphic means a physical change to a rock caused by heat and pressure.

  28. Contact Metamorphism • When surrounding rock comes in contact with magma but does not melt they often change to harder metamorphic type rocks.

  29. The lava flow exposed in this road cut near Alturas, California, has baked the mud beneath it into brick-red shale, a case of contact metamorphism.

  30. Regional Metamorphism • Rocks that are typically altered in composition, texture, or internal structure by extreme heat and pressure over a large area during mountain formations or subduction.

  31. Foliated Metamorphic Rocks •   The generally-crude layering or foliation of many metamorphic rocks is due to the intense directional pressure they experience • Usually along a convergent plate tectonic boundary.  •  Flat mineral crystals and fragments gradually become oriented perpendicular to the directions of pressure. 

  32. Foliated rocks

  33. More Foliated rocks

  34. Chert • jaspilite, which consists of alternating bands of red chert (jasper; cryptocrystalline quartz - SiO2), red hematite (iron oxide - Fe2O3), and silvery-gray specular hematite (iron oxide - Fe2O3).

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