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Published byAdan Dixson Modified over 9 years ago
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Igneous Rocks
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Classification of Igneous Rocks Most Abundant Elements: O, Si, Al, Fe, Ca, Mg, K, Na Calculate Elements as Oxides (Account for O) How Much SiO 2 ? (Account for Si) What Feldspars are Present? (Account for Al, Ca, Na, K) What Else is Present? (Account for Mg, Fe)
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Silica Content Oversaturated: Excess of Silica –Quartz Present Saturated: Just enough silica to combine with other ions Undersaturated: Silica-deficient Minerals Present –Olivine, Nepheline, Corundum, etc. –Can’t coexist with quartz
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Feldspars Plagioclase vs. K-Spar (Ca and Na vs. K) Relative Aluminum Content –Peraluminous: Al left over after Feldspars form Sillimanite, garnet, corundum may be present –Peralkaline: Al insufficient to form Feldspars Riebeckite, Aegerine, may be present
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Other Ingredients Ferromagnesian minerals heavily influenced by characteristics like water –The only difference between rocks with biotite, amphibole or pyroxene may be water content Basis for classification of ultramafic rocks.
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“Mainstream” Igneous Rocks Ultramafic<40% SiO 2 –Plutonic: DuniteVolcanic: Komatiite Mafic40-50% SiO 2 –Plutonic: GabbroVolcanic: Basalt Intermediate50-60% SiO 2 –Plutonic: DioriteVolcanic: Andesite Felsic>60% SiO 2 –Plutonic: Granite Volcanic: Rhyolite
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The Feldspars Potassium Feldspars –T dependent –Microcline, Orthoclase, Sanidine Plagioclase –Classic Example of Solid Solution –Ca vs. Na content Perthite: exsolution texture Anorthoclase: K, Ca, Na mixture
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Potassium Feldspars Microcline –Lowest Temperature variety –Plutonic rocks –Almost always perthitic Orthoclase –Medium Temperatures –Volcanic and Plutonic Rocks Sanidine –Highest Temperature –Volcanic Rocks –May Have Appreciable Na More a function of cooling rate and pressure than temperature?
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Plagioclase Feldspars Albite (0-10% Ca): Where Na goes in metamorphic rocks, metasomatism Oligoclase (10-30% Ca): Granitic rocks Andesine (30-50% Ca): Intermediate rocks Labradorite (50-70% Ca): Mafic rocks Bytownite (70-90% Ca): Rare - too sodic for marble, too calcic for magmas Anorthite (90-100% Ca): Impure metamorphosed limestones
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Perthite and Anorthoclase Ionic Radii (nm) –K:0.133 –Ca0.099 –Na0.097 Ca and Na substitute freely K can fit in lattice at high T Na can fit in K-spar lattice but not Ca Perthite: K-spar and plagioclase separate during cooling (Exsolution) Anorthoclase: Na-K mix, 10-40% K-spar
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The Feldspars
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Overview of the IUGS classification of igneous rocks
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Silica-Saturated Rocks
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Foids (Feldspathoids) Fill the “ecological niche” of feldspars when insufficient silica is available Major Minerals: –Nepheline (Na,K)AlSiO 4 –Leucite KAlSi 2 O 6
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Silica-Deficient Rocks
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Volcanic and Plutonic Equivalents Granite Granodiorite Tonalite Syenite Monzonite Diorite Gabbro Foid Syenite Foid Monzonite Foid Gabbro Rhyolite Dacite Trachyte Latite Andesite Basalt Phonolite Tephrite Basanite
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Olivine Like Plagioclase, a solid solution –Forsterite (Mg 2 SiO 4 ) and Fayalite (Fe 2 SiO 4 ) Becomes More Fe-Rich as Magma Cools Forsterite –Can be nearly pure in metamorphic rocks –Cannot coexist with quartz Fayalite –Rarely found pure –Can coexist with quartz
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Ortho- and Clinopyroxene Orthopyroxene –Orthorhombic –Mixture of Enstatite (Mg 2 Si 2 O 6 ) and Ferrosilite (Fe 2 Si 2 O 6 ). The generic mixture is termed Hypersthene ((Mg,Fe) 2 Si 2 O 6 ) Clinopyroxene –Monoclinic –Mixture of Diopside (CaMgSi 2 O 6 ) and Hedenbergite (CaFeSi 2 O 6 ) The generic mixture is termed Augite ((Ca,Mg,Fe)2Si 2 O 6 )
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Ultramafic Rocks
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Mode and Norm Mode: What is actually present Norm: Ideal mineral composition –Ignores water –Assumes minor components used predictably –Assumes major minerals form in predictable sequence –Purpose is to visualize rock from chemical data
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CIPW Norm Cross, Iddings, Pirrson and Washington All Cations treated as oxides Anions (S, F, Cl) treated as elements Convert wt% to molecular proportions (Wt%/Mol Wt) Allocate oxides to mineral phases
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Allocate minor elements Ba, Sr Ca; MnO FeO CO 2 Calcite (with CaO) P 2 O 5 Apatite (with CaO) S Pyrite (with FeO) TiO 2 Ilmenite (with FeO) F Fluorite (with CaO) Cr 2 O 3 Chromite (with FeO) Cl Halite (With Na 2 O)
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Start Forming Silicates ZrO 2 Zircon (with SiO 2 ) Form provisional Feldspars –Na 2 O Albite –K 2 O K-Spar –CaO Anorthite –With SiO 2 and Al 2 O 3 –May need to convert to foids if SiO 2 runs out
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Allocate FeO, MgO and CaO Fe 2 O 3 Acmite (With Na 2 O and SiO 2 ) and Magnetite (With FeO) FeO and MgO Hypersthene (provisional) CaO + Hy Diopside Excess SiO 2 Quartz
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If Silica Runs Out Hypersthene Olivine Albite Nepheline K-Spar Leucite
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Example SiO 2 83 TiO 2 2 Al 2 O 3 16 Fe 2 O 3 2 FeO 10 MgO 17 CaO 17 Na 2 O 5 K 2 O 1
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Let the Games Begin Ilmenite: TiO 2 0; FeO 10 - 2 = 8 K-Spar: K 2 O 0; Al 2 O 3 16 – 1 = 15; SiO 2 83 – 6K 2 O = 77 Albite: Na 2 O 0; Al 2 O 3 15 – 5 = 10; SiO 2 77 – 6Na 2 O = 47 Anorthite: CaO 0; Al 2 O 3 10 – 17 = -7! –Excess CaO –CaO 17-10 = 7; Al 2 O 3 0; SiO 2 47 – 2CaO = 27
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Final Allocations Magnetite: Fe 2 O 3 0; FeO 10-2 = 8 FeO + MgO = 8 + 17 = 25 Diopside: CaO 0; FeO + MgO = 25 – 7 = 18; SiO 2 SiO 2 – 2CaO = 27-14 = 13 Hypersthene: FeO + MgO 0; SiO 2 13 – 18 = -5 (Call this -D) Olivine: Ol = D = 5 Hypersthene: Hy – 2D = 18 – 10 = 8
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Final Result Ilmenite: 2 K-Spar: 1 Albite: 5 Anorthite: 10 These are molecular proportions Magnetite: 2 Diopside: 7 Olivine: 5 Hypersthene: 8 Multiply by Mol. Wt. and normalize for Wt%
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