Igneous Process: Joe vs. the Volcano
Granite (Arcadia, Great Smokey Mt.)
Commonly used for tombstones and monuments and as building stones Well known areas in the US are Vermont, North Carolina and Minnesota coarse-grained rock composed of about 10-20% quartz and about 50% potassium feldspar.
Andesite (Mt Saint Helen's)
A type of Granite that is located near the surface Medium-gray, fine grained rock typically of volcanic origin
Rhyolite (Yellowstone, Crater Lake)
Fine-grained equivalent of granite and is composed of light colored silicates contains glass fragments and voids, indicating that it cooled rapidly in a surface large intrusive masses thick rhyolite lava flows and extensive ash deposits in and around Yellowstone NP
Extrusive Igneous rocks
They form on the and have smaller crystals Also called volcanic rocks
Intrusive Igneous rocks
They form underground and have larger crystals Also known as plutonic rocks
Basalt (Hawai'i)
composed primarily of pyroxene and calcium-rich plagioclase feldspar most common extrusive igneous rock the upper layers of the oceanic crust consists of basalt
Igneous Rock (ignis = fire)
forms as molten rock cools and solidifies composed mainly of silicate minerals
Magma
is formed by partial melting that occurs at various levels within Earth's crust and upper mantle to depths of about 250 kilometers
Granite Parks
Arcadia NP Yosemite NP
National Parks with a Crater Lake
Crater Lake NP
Lava
When molten rock reaches Earth's surface Lava is emitted as fountains that are produced when escaping gasses propel it from a magma chamber Can be explosively ejected, producing dramatic steam and ash eruptions