Chapter 4 quiz & hw
q23: How does subduction trigger melting?
Flux melting of the asthenosphere above the sub-ducting slab creates a rising melt.
q20: Volcanic arcs
are fed magma from flux melting.
q21: Pillow basalts
are formed in a submarine environment.
q12:Mafic minerals
crystallize at a higher temperature than do silicic minerals.
h2: Choose the most likely product of partially melting a rock of intermediate composition.
felsic magma
h4: Order the steps that lead to assimilation.
first: -a magma forms and begins to migrate through the crust -blocks of the surrounding silica-rich crust break off and become incorporated into the magma -incorporated crustal blocks within the magma melt, mixing with the magma -the amount of silica increases and the magma composition changes accordingly last:
q2: Volatiles that come out of the Earth as volcanic products
were mixed with the molten rock
h10: This is a coarsely crystalline igneous rock, so to identify the rock you only need to estimate its composition. Select the option that gives the closest approximation of the proportion of the minerals.
15% mafic (dark) minerals, 85% felsic (light) minerals
q1: Magmas can have a variety of chemical compositions for which of the following reasons? A. Two magmas may mix together to form a third of differing composition. B. Source rocks undergo varying degrees of partial melting, producing magmas of a different composition than the rock. C. All of the possible answers are correct. D. Melts may come from different source rocks.
All of the possible answers are correct.
h5: Using the phase diagram shown below, determine which statement best describes what happens as a rock is moved from point A to point B.
As a rock is moved up in the Earth, it is subjected to slightly lower temperatures and much lower pressures, and it begins to melt.
q11: The black, fine-grained tabular intrusions between layers of horizontal sedimentary rock shown in this picture are
basaltic sills.
q10: Magma moves upward toward the Earth's surface
because it is less dense than the surrounding rock
q18: Intrusive igneous rocks
cool slowly and are coarse-grained.
q14: An igneous rock that has a medium-gray, fine-grained groundmass with large crystals of plagioclase
crystallized at depth from intermediate-composition magma, and then rose to the surface and became a lava flow
h9: Determine whether the rock is felsic, intermediate, mafic, or ultramafic. (Note the relatively high proportions of grey, white, and pink minerals in the sample.)
felsic
h11: Sort the images below into either the intrusive or extrusive categories based on how they cooled.
intrusive: -split rock -penny extrusive: -lava flow label -man -rocks
q16: Granite
is felsic in composition.
q3: Felsic (or silicic) magma
is more viscous than mafic magma
q19: In which tectonic setting would you most expect to find igneous activity?
landward of oceanic trenches
h1: Order the compositions of magmas produced via melting from lowest temperature to highest. To do this, you will need to use the green slider bar for the temperature control on the far left of the simulation. Slide the green bar to various temperatures, and then migrate the magma to see the composition of the magma that will result. What composition of magma is produced by melting at lower temperatures? At higher temperatures?
lower: - felsic - intermediate - mafic - ultramafic higher:
q6: Hot, solid rock in the Earth's crust
may melt if heat is transferred to it from hot mantle rock rising up into the crust.
q9: Magma may cool and crystallize to become solid igneous rock
more slowly in a deep pluton than in a shallow sill.
q7: The dramatic scenery of the Sierra Nevada range in California, shown here,
owes its existence to erosion of a batholith.
q5: As a sample moves from Point A to Point B in this diagram, what happens?
It begins to melt as a result of decompression.
q4: In this diagram, Point A represents rock that fits which of the following descriptions? A. Its physical state is molten. B. It has a pressure of approximately 100,000 bars (100 kbar). C. It is crustal rock. D. Its temperature is about 1,000°C.
It has a pressure of approximately 100,000 bars (100 kbar).
h6: Order the steps involved in fractional crystallization.
- magma, after entering through the bottom of the magma chamber, reaches the top of the chamber where temperatures are lower - magnesium-and iron rich minerals begin to crystallize - mineral crystals, having a higher density than liquid magma, sink to the bottom of the magma chamber - the magma shifts toward a more intermediate composition
h3: Which of the following statements are true about partial melting? A.Mafic components of the parent rock tend to go into the liquid state first during partial melting. B.Partial melting results in magmas that are more felsic in composition than the parent rock. C.Felsic components of the parent rock tend to go into the liquid state first during partial melting. D.As more of the rock melts during partial melting, the magma becomes more mafic than the original melt that formed.
-Felsic components of the parent rock tend to go into the liquid state first during partial melting. -Partial melting results in magmas that are more felsic in composition than the parent rock. -As more of the rock melts during partial melting, the magma becomes more mafic than the original melt that formed.
h12: Identify the four tectonic settings of igneous activity.
-top left: contential rift -top right: subduction zone -bottom left: hot spot volcano -bottom right: mid-ocean ridge
h8: Coarse-grained igneous rocks, such as the granite shown below, contain crystals that are large enough to identify. The crystals are interlocking, so the boundaries of crystals can be difficult to recognize. Here, minerals have been outlined and shaded to emphasize individual grains. Using your knowledge of mineral properties such as color and luster, identify the minerals by dragging and dropping the labels to the correct location.
White: plagioclase feldspar Pink: potassium feldspar Gray: quartz Black: biotite
q15: Which of the following words could be used to describe portions of a rock with a porphyritic texture? A. phenocryst B. All of the possible answers are correct. C. groundmass D. aphanitic
all of the possible answers are correct.
q17: After an explosive volcanic eruption on an island, the surrounding sea is full of light-gray, floating rock. What must it be?
pumice
q13: Which of the following terms has to do with extrusive igneous activity? A. batholith B. pluton C. pyroclastic D. laccolith
pyroclastic
q22: Large igneous provinces (LIPs)
represent special events in the Earth's history that may have been caused by plume activity.
q8: Bowen's reaction series
shows that minerals in a cooling magma crystallize in a predictable order.
h7: What a Geologist Sees. A geology student sits beside an outcrop on Mont Royal, the namesake of Montreal. This exposure shows the intrusion of molten basalt into preexisting limestone.
top to bottom: -pointing to line: depositional contact -in between lines:bed of limestone -pointing to root: intrusive contact -in root: igneous dike -first scale: correct scale -second scale: