Geology Lab - Rock Identification
sedimentary rock
composed of pieces of other rocks or chemical properties produced by weathering and erosion of preexisting rocks
aphantic texture
crystals re formed but are too small to be seen with the naked eye ex. Felsite
fine-grained texture
crystals visible with the naked eye but are still very small ex. Rhyolite
metamorphic rock
produced by the alteration of preexisting rocks by heat, pressure, and fluids to such an extent that their original character is destroyed
mafic igneous rocks
pyroxene, amphibole, ca-plagioclase
Organic
sedimentary rocks formed from the carbon-rich relicts of organisms
Biochemical
sedimentary rocks with an organic texture of skeletal debris from organisms
igneous rock
solidify from hot molten material called magma (composed of silicates, oxides, gasses)
glassy texture
texture results from extremely rapid cooling, similar to ordinary glass ex. Obsidian
phaneritic texture
an igneous rock, individual rocks are large enough to see with the naked eye ex. Granite
Chemical
chemical sedimentary rocks are typically formed by precipitation dissolved minerals from concentrated solutions or evaporation of water
intermediate igneous rocks
intermediate plagioclase feldspars, pyroxenes, amphiboles and biotite
vesicular texture
open holes in igneous rocks formed by the preservation of bubbles in magma
felsic igneous rocks
orthoclase feldspare, muscovite, quartz
porphyritic texture
two distinct sizes of crystals, fine-grained and phenocrysts ex. Horneblende
Foliation
well-defined parallel alignment of constituent minerals or segregated into bands