Mrs. Griffin.  Granite, very durable.  Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town, South Africa…..De Beers?  Cecil Rhodes  Vietnam Memorial.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 4 - Rocks What can be learned by studying rocks…
Advertisements

Igneous, Sedimentary & Metamorphic Rocks
Igneous Rocks and Classifying Igneous Rocks
What is a rock? A rock is a combination of minerals. For example: Granite is composed of biotite, quartz, and feldspar.
Rocks 6.E.2.1 Summarize the structure of the Earth, including the layers, the mantle and core based on the relative position,
CH. 5 – Igneous Rocks   What are igneous rocks?   Formed by the hardening of magma.   “Ignis” means fire   What is the difference between magma.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Chapter 2 Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
+. + Three types of Rocks 1. Igneous 2. Sedimentary 3. Metamorphic.
Rocks 3.1 The Rock Cycle  Rocks are any solid mass of minerals, or mineral-like matter, occurring naturally as part of our planet.  Types of Rocks 1.
Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted
Chapter 4 Rocks Granite contains quartz, orthoclase feldspar, and biotite.
Rocks. Bellringer K= know about rocks already W= Want to learn about rocks L= Learned about rocks.
Chapter 5 and 6 Rocks.
Igneous, Metamorphic & Sedimentary
Igneous Rocks Igneous Rocks “Ignis” means fire
Chapter 5-Igneous Rocks
Igneous, Sedimentary & Metamorphic Rocks
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Sedimentary and Metamorphic Rocks
Daily Science (pg. 14) Name the four Earth systems and explain each.
Guided Notes for Igneous Rocks
Earth Science A study in Change: Rocks Watch for & It will tell you when/where information will be used in this unit!
Granite is a mixture of:
ROCKS.
Rocks and the Rock Cycle
What do rocks tell us about the Earth?.  Formed from the cooling and crystallization of magma  Magma – Molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface (800.
Liz LaRosa 2010http:// Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted.
Liz LaRosa 2009http:// Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted.
Rocks.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle. Notes The Rock Cycle Notes - Advanced Write the definition of a rock: Rocks - A solid, naturally occurring mineral or mineral-like.
Rocks and the Rock Cycle Rocks are made of one or more minerals. Each rock belongs to one of three major types; based on how it is formed. Rock Types 1.
IGNEOUSSEDIMENTARYMETAMORPHIC FORMED BY: CHARACTERISTICS: CHARACTERISTICS: EXAMPLES: EXAMPLE:
Igneous Rocks Text ref. Ch5 (pg. 98).
Formation and Destruction of Rock Types Rock Types.
WHAT ARE IGNEOUS, METAMORPHIC AND SEDIMENTARY ROCKS?
 To analyze and describe the types of rocks that appear on Earth.
Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted.  Key Question: What are the 3 types of rocks, and how can we tell them apart?  Initial thoughts:
An ever changing Earth Rock Cycle Magma A body of molten rock found at depth. (2000 °F)
Igneous Rocks Intrusive and extrusive rocks formed from the cooling and crystallization of magma.
Rocks.  Rocks are any solid mass of mineral or mineral-like matter occurring naturally as part of our planet.
Ch. 5 IgneousMagma Characteristics Extrusive Intrusive Misc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Types of Rock Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted
Liz LaRosa 2010http:// Images from Geology.com unless otherwise noted.
Rocks and The Rock Cycle. What is a Rock? A rock is a mixture of one or more minerals, glass, and sometimes, consolidated organic material (something.
Chapter 5. Lava: magma that flows out onto Earth’s surface.  Igneous rocks : formed from the crystallization of magma. What are igneous rocks?  Magma.
Chapter 3 Rocks. The Rock Cycle Rock – naturally occurring, consolidated mixture of minerals Three types (igneous, sedimentary, metamorphic) Mineral –
ROCKS AND THE ROCK CYCLE. WHAT IS A ROCK? A rock is mineral matter of variable composition, consolidated or unconsolidated, assembled in masses or considerable.
EARTH SCIENCE Prentice Hall EARTH SCIENCE Tarbuck Lutgens 
Rocks & The Rock Cycle ADVANCED EARTH SCIENCE VA SOL ES. 5.
Rocks Rock makes up the solid part of the earth. Rock is made from minerals or rock can be made of solid organic matter. Three classes of rock: Igneous,
T/F Magma is a mix of molten rock, gases and minerals crystals.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
3.2 Rocks.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Igneous Rocks Section 1: What are igneous rocks?
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Chapter 5 Igneous Rocks Section 5.1.
Igneous Rocks.
Bell Ringer Name three of the five qualifications to be considered a mineral. Is lava a mineral? Why or why not? How would rapid cooling affect the formation.
Types of Rock.
Sedimentary Rocks.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Igneous Rocks.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
3 Groups of Rocks Igneous : intrusive & extrusive
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Rocks & The Rock Cycle.
Types of Rock.
Presentation transcript:

Mrs. Griffin

 Granite, very durable.  Rhodes Memorial in Cape Town, South Africa…..De Beers?  Cecil Rhodes  Vietnam Memorial

 Igneous rocks are formed from the crystallization of magma.  Lava is magma that flows out onto Earth’s surface.

 Extrusive- fine- grained, that cool on Earth’s surface.  Intrusive-coarse- grained, that cool slowly beneath Earth’s surface.  Granite

 Slushy mix of molten rock, gases, and mineral crystals.  Elements are the same as the major elements found in Earth’s crust: O, Si, Al, Fe, Mg, Ca, K, Na.  Silica (SiO2) is the most abundant compound found in magma. Magmas are classified as basaltic, andesitic, and rhyolitic based on the amount of silica they contain:  Basaltic 50%, andesitic 60%, rhyolitic 70%

 Temperature, pressure, water content, and mineral composition.  Temperature and pressure/Earth’s crust: increase or decrease?  Water-> changes the melting point of rocks; as water content increases, the melting point decreases.  Different minerals have different melting points.

 Water, candle wax, and ice tray.  Rocks contain different minerals and therefore have different melting points….this is why magma is often slushy.  Partial melting: where some minerals melt at low temperatures while others remain solid.  Fractional crystallization: the process where different minerals form at different temperatures.  The 1 st minerals to crystallize from magma are the last minerals to melt during partial melting.

 Further classify by mineral composition: 3 main groups of igneous rocks:  Felsic- granite, light-colored, & have high silica content, and contain quartz and the feldspars orthoclase and plagioclase.  Mafic rocks-include gabbro, dark colored, lower silica contents, rich in iron and magnesium.  Ultramafic- peridotite and dunite, have low silica content and high levels of iron and magnesium.  Diamonds are found in ultramafic rocks known as kimberlites. ▪ Kimberly Diamond Mine in South Africa

 Grain size- obsidian no visible mineral grains vs. gabbro.  Texture, such as glassy.  Porphyritic texture- characterized by large, well- formed crystals surrounded by finer grained crystals of the same mineral or different minerals.

 What are igneous rocks? How are they formed?  Compare and contrast intrusive/extrusive rocks?  What is partial melting?  Explain fractional crystallization.

Mrs. Griffin

 Much of Earth’s surface is covered with sediments- pieces of solid material that have been deposited on Earth’s surface by wind, water, ice, gravity, or chemical precipitation.  Up or down?  When these sediments become cemented together they form sedimentary rocks. This process begins when weathering and erosion produce sediments.

 A set of physical and chemical processes that break rock into smaller pieces.  Produces rock and mineral fragments known as clastic sediments. How is a solid rock formed from clastic sediments?  Weathering  Erosion and transport  Deposition  Burial and lithification

 The primary feature of sedimentary rocks is bedding.  Graded bedding- particle sizes become progressively heavier and coarser towards the bottom layer.  Cross bedding- inclined layers of sediment move forward across a horizontal surface.

 The best-known features of sedimentary rocks is what???  Fossils

 The most common type of sedimentary rocks are clastic rocks. These can be further classified according to the sizes of their particles.  Coarse-grained- breccia  Medium-grained- sandstone, an important feature: porosity, the % of open spaces b/w grains in a rock.  Fine-grained- siltstone.

 When rocks are buried at great depths, pressure and temperature increase -> rocks melt and form magma.  What happens if they don’t get to this point? ▪ Rock will change form while remaining solid, metamorphism.  When high temperature and pressure affect large region’s of the Earth’s crust they produce large belts of regional metamorphism.

 Classified into two textural groups:  Foliated- wavy layer and bands of minerals, schist and gneiss.  Nonfoliated- lack mineral grains with long axes in one direction, quartzite and marble.

 The continues changing and remaking of rocks.