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GEO1003 Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology

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Title: GEO1003 Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology


1
Spring 2009
GEO1003 Igneous and Metamorphic Petrology
Almost all Earth is igneous or metamorphic rocks
  • Introduction to the Course
  • Very Brief History of Igneous Petrology

2
  • Web Page http//skilling.geology.pitt.edu/GEO1003
    /syllabus.htm
  • Labs start next week with James Gardiner
    (jbg10_at_pitt.edu)
  • See handout today for textbooks, class and exam
  • schedules, grading etc
  • 3 exams (60 total) and lab (assignments and
    quizzes, 40)
  • Exams are not comprehensive
  • Class average posted on web after grading
  • Office Hours 4-6 Mondays-Wednesdays

3
History of Igneous Petrology Themes
  • Up to 18th century history of igneous petrology
    is history of volcanology
  • What is internal heat source?
  • How deep is heat source?
  • Do basalts (and granites) crystallize from water
    or molten rock?
  • Intimately related to biblically-based ideas of
    age of Earth and Deluge until 18thC
  • In 20th C, plate tectonic theory, recognition of
    heat from radioactive decay,
  • melting experiments on rocks and new analytical
    techniques revolutionized understanding
  • of origin of igneous rocks

4
Ancient Ideas Introduction
  • Ideas about volcanoes only
  • Roman, Greek and several central American
    civilizations existed in areas of active
    volcanism
  • Descriptions (often fanciful) and interpretations
    (more fanciful often) of Vesuvius, Etna
  • and Iceland are most common
  • Greek-Roman-Judaeo-Christian idea of hell is hot
    and volcanic and is presumably derived
  • from ideas about Mediterranean volcanoes, like
    Etna
  • Greek god of hot underworld was Hephaestus and
    the Roman equivalent was Vulcano (who
  • had his forge on Vulcano in the Aeolian Islands
    (north of Sicily), Italy
  • Many ideas based on underground winds or
    exhalations circulating under Earth
  • No thought to igneous rocks that formed at depth

5
View of other Aeolian Islands from Vulcano
6
AD79 Eruption of Vesuvius
  • Best known description of igneous phenomena in
    classical literature
  • Most famous description of AD79 eruption is by
    Pliny the Younger who wrote about
  • the eruption, his escape from it, and the death
    of his polymath uncle Pliny the Elder
  • (below) (by asphyxiation)
  • Pliny the Younger described the eruption column,
    pyroclasts (pumice, ash)
  • Pliny the Elder most famous for his 37 volume
    Natural
  • History

He began to work long before daybreak.He read
nothing without making extracts he used even to
say that there was no book so bad as not to
contain something of value. In the country it
was only the time when he was actually in his
bath that was exempted from study. When
travelling, as though freed from every other
care, he devoted himself to study alone. In
short, he deemed all time wasted that was not
employed in study."
7
Ancient Ideas
  • Aristotle was an iconic figure in the ancient and
    Medieval world and his ideas about
  • volcanoes were commonly accepted
  • His exhalation theory suggested that
    underground winds caused earthquakes and
  • eventually broke out of the surface shattering
    the surrounding rocks so quickly that
  • they caught fire
  • Seneca the Younger also favoured a windy
    explanation, but also suggested that the
  • winds ignited combustible fuels like sulfur and
    coal in the subsurface by friction
  • Wasnt until the Renaissance that we see any
  • improvement on these early ideas,

Seneca
8
Athansius Kircher (1602-1680)
  • Catholic priest in Germany
  • Wrote one of first (if not the first) book solely
    about volcanoes
  • Fire-Vomiting Mountains with Their Remarkables
  • His ideas were still largely an amalgam of
    classical ideas
  • He coined the delightful word ignivomous for
    volcanic
  • eruptions and rocks
  • Suggested that heat sources were deep-seated,
  • see first cross-section of Earth drawn by him on
    right

9
Sketch of Vesuvius by Kircher, showing its
internal fire
10
Sir William Hamilton
  • Envoy of Britain to court of Naples in 1760s
  • Hobby was study of Vesuvius, but he also visited
    Etna,
  • Vulcano and Stromboli
  • Recognized authority on volcanoes in 18th century
  • He described lava flows (active and old) on
    Vesuvius
  • in detail
  • He collected and analyzed samples of lava and
    fumarolic salts
  • Hamilton believed volcanism arose from combustion
    of various subsurface fuels

11
18th Century Neptunism versus Plutonism
  • Really have to wait until late 18th century
    before any serious scientific thought
  • on volcanic and plutonic rocks
  • In 16th-17th century an argument developed that
    many rocks like basalt and granite
  • had been precipitated from a primordial ocean.
    This was challenged in the 18th century
  • During 18th century there was a vigorous debate
    between those who saw all
  • rocks as sedimented out of, or precipitated from,
    water (Neptunists) and those
  • who suggested that some hard rocks like granite
    and basalt had once been molten
  • (Plutonists)
  • James Hutton was a leading plutonist
  • Battle raged between supporters
  • of German Abraham Werner
  • (Neptunists) and supporters of
  • Hutton

Hutton
12
James Hutton (1726-1797)
  • Founder of modern geology
  • Leading proponent of plutonism and old (gt6000
    years) age for Earth in his famous
  • book Theory of the Earth. No vestige of a
    beginning, no prospect of an end
  • Was first person to actually study igneous rocks
    in the field in any detail. Let us open
  • the book of nature and read her records
  • He observed that many basalts he studied had been
    forced (intruded) into sedimentary
  • rocks, and suggested that this could only happen
    if they were once molten
  • Prior to Hutton all granites were thought to be
    oldest rocks on Earth, and most suggested
  • they were crystallized from water
  • He suggested that granite was a mass of
    subterranean lava as he observed dikes and
  • veins of granite intruded into the surrounding
    rocks (just like basalt)
  • Hutton argued that granite could not be
    precipitated in layers from an ocean as it
    intruded
  • older rocks

13
Hutton sketched intrusive contacts like this at
base of a sill in Edinburgh
14
Internal Heat Source of Earth Radioactive Decay
  • In 19th C, chemists such as Humphrey Davy
    suggested chemical reactions may be heat
  • source in Earth
  • Since 1920s know that internal heat source of
    Earth is not combustion, friction or
  • chemical reactions but energy released during
    radioactive decay
  • Most heat released from decay of U and Th
    isotopes in core
  • Some internal heat from original accretion of
    Earth
  • Some internal heat also generated during
    differentiation (separation of interior of a
  • a planet or moon into layers of increasing
    density with depth)
  • Some tidal heating from pull of Sun and Moon (but
    minor)

15
Plate Tectonics
  • Like all branches of Earth Science, plate
    tectonic theories revolutionized our
    understanding
  • of igneous rocks
  • We know that the geographical distribution of
    volcanic and plutonic activity on Earth can only
  • be explained using plate tectonics
  • We now know that certain igneous rock types can
    only be formed at certain types of plate
  • boundaries
  • We can now analyze an isolated igneous rock
    sample and infer its tectonic setting
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