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Classifying Rocks

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Table of Contents Classifying Rocks Igneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks Rocks from Reefs Metamorphic Rocks The Rock Cycle The Rock Cycle and Plate Tectonics Plate ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Classifying Rocks


1
Table of Contents
  • Classifying Rocks
  • Igneous Rocks
  • Sedimentary Rocks
  • Rocks from Reefs
  • Metamorphic Rocks
  • The Rock Cycle

2
Studying Rocks
- Classifying Rocks
  • When studying a rock sample, geologists observe
    the rocks mineral composition, color, and
    texture.

3
Mineral Composition and Color
- Classifying Rocks
  • Rock a solid mixture of minerals and other
    materials.
  • Rock-forming minerals the common minerals that
    make up most of the rocks of Earths crust.
  • Granite tends to be a light-colored rock that
    has high silica content
  • Basalt tends to be a dark-colored rock that is
    low in silica

4
Texture
- Classifying Rocks
  • Grains particles of minerals or other rocks
    that give a rock its texture.
  • Texture the look and feel of a rocks surface,
    determined by the size, shape, and pattern of a
    rocks grains.

5
Texture
- Classifying Rocks
  • Grain size
  • Coarse-grained large easy to see grains
  • Fine-grained so small they can only be seen
    under a microscope

6
Texture
- Classifying Rocks
  • Grain Shape varies greatly from sand grains to
    large triangular grains
  • Grain Pattern can vary also from layers to
    swirls to bands

7
How Rocks Form
- Classifying Rocks
  • Geologists classify rocks into three major
    groups
  • igneous rock, sedimentary rock, and metamorphic
    rock.

8
How Rocks Form
- Classifying Rocks
  • Igneous rock type of rock that forms from the
    melting then cooling of molten rock at or below
    the surface.
  • Sedimentary rock type of rock that forms when
    particles from other rocks or the remains of
    plants and animals are pressed and cemented
    together.
  • Metamorphic rock type of rock that forms from
    an existing rock that is changed by heat and
    pressure

9
Classifying Igneous Rocks
- Igneous Rocks
  • Igneous rocks are classified according to their
    origin, texture, and mineral composition.

10
Classifying Igneous Rocks
  • Extrusive igneous rock forms from lava on
    Earths surface.
  • Intrusive igneous rock forms when magma hardens
    beneath Earths surface.
  • The faster igneous rock cools, the finer the
    grains
  • Extrusive igneous rock tends to be a
    finer-grained rock than intrusive igneous rock

11
Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks
  • Granite is a mixture of light-colored minerals,
    such as feldspar and quartz, and dark-colored
    minerals, including hornblende and different
    types of mica. But granite can vary in mineral
    composition. This affects its color and texture.

12
Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks
  • Reading Graphs
  • What mineral is most abundant in granite?
  • Feldspar

13
Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks
  • Reading Graphs
  • About what percentage of granite is made up of
    dark minerals?
  • 10

14
Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks
  • Calculating
  • If the amount of quartz increases to 35 percent
    and the amount of dark-colored minerals stays the
    same, what percentage of the granite will be made
    up of feldspar?
  • 100 - (35 10) 55

15
Mineral Mixture
- Igneous Rocks
  • Predicting
  • How would the color of the granite change if it
    contained less feldspar and more mica and
    hornblende?
  • The overall color would be darker.

16
Links on Igneous Rocks
- Igneous Rocks
  • Click the SciLinks button for links on igneous
    rocks.

17
From Sediment to Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Most sedimentary rocks are formed through a
    series of processes erosion, deposition,
    compaction, and cementation.

18
From Sediment to Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sediment small, solid pieces of material that
    come from rocks or organisms.
  • Usually forms due to erosion
  • Erosion a destructive process in which water or
    wind loosens and carries away fragments of rock.
  • Deposition process by which sediment settles
    out of the water or wind that is carrying it.

19
From Sediment to Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Compaction process by which sediments are
    pressed together under their own weight.
  • Occurs over millions of years as layers build
  • Cementation process by which dissolved minerals
    crystallize and glue particles of sediment
    together into one mass.
  • Takes place when sediment is in the presence of
    water

20
Types of Sedimentary Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • There are three major groups of sedimentary
    rocks
  • clastic rocks, organic rocks, and chemical rocks.
  • Clastic rock sedimentary rock that forms when
    rock fragments are squeezed together under high
    pressure.
  • Can range in size from microscopic clay particles
    to large boulders
  • Ex shale, sandstone, conglomerate, and breccia

21
Types of Sedimentary Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Organic rock sedimentary rock that forms from
    remains of organisms deposited in thick layers.
  • Ex Coal and Limestone
  • Coal forms from the remains of swamp plants
    buried in water.
  • Limestone forms in the ocean, where many living
    things, such as coral, clams, and oysters, have
    hard shells made of calcite that collect on the
    ocean floor.

Peat
Lignite
Bituminous
Anthracite
22
Types of Sedimentary Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Chemical rock sedimentary rock that forms when
    minerals crystallize from a solution. (Reacts to
    HCl)
  • Ex Limestone forms from calcite deposits
    dissolved in lakes, rivers, streams.

23
Uses of Sedimentary Rock
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Sedimentary rock has been used for thousands of
    years in building structures, tools, and
    statues.
  • Ex The White House in Washington D.C. is
    constructed of sandstone.

24
Links on Sedimentary Rocks
- Sedimentary Rocks
  • Click the SciLinks button for links on
    sedimentary rocks.

25
Coral Reefs
- Rocks From Reefs
  • Coral reef a structure of calcite skeletons
    built up by coral animals in warm, shallow ocean
    water.
  • When coral animals die, their skeletons remain.
    More corals build on top of them, gradually
    forming a coral reef.
  • Only form in ocean water between 30N and 30S
    latitude

26
Coral Reefs(not in notes)
  • Coral reef is really organic(from living things)
    limestone.
  • Deposits of organic limestone help geologists
    figure out what the environment was like long
    ago.
  • If they find a fossil of coral reef, they would
    know that location used to contain warm, shallow
    ocean water.

27
More on Coral Landforms
- Rocks From Reefs
  • Click the PHSchool.com button for an
    activityabout coral landforms.

28
Metamorphic Rock
- Metamorphic Rocks
  • Metamorphic rock forms when heat and pressure
    beneath Earths surface changes the appearance,
    texture, crystal structure, and mineral content
    of either igneous, sedimentary, or other
    metamorphic rock.

29
Types of Metamorphic Rocks
- Metamorphic Rocks
  • Geologists classify metamorphic rocks according
    to the arrangement of the grains that make up the
    rocks.
  • Foliated rocks metamorphic rocks that have
    grains arranged in parallel layers or bands.
  • Ex Slate metamorphic shale (denser and more
    compact than shale)

Shale
Slate
Gneiss
30
Types of Metamorphic Rocks
- Metamorphic Rocks
  • Nonfoliated rocks metamorphic rocks that have
    randomly arranged metamorphic grains that do not
    split into layers
  • Ex Quartzite metamorphic sandstone
  • Marble metamorphic limestone

31
Links on Metamorphic Rocks
- Metamorphic Rocks
  • Click the SciLinks button for links on
    metamorphic rocks.

32
A Cycle of Many Pathways
- The Rock Cycle
  • Forces deep inside Earth and at the surface
    produce a slow cycle that builds, destroys, and
    changes the rocks in the crust.

33
- The Rock Cycle
  • Rock cycle processes on the surface and inside
    Earth that slowly change rocks from one kind to
    another.

34
The Rock Cycle and Plate Tectonics
- The Rock Cycle
  • Plate movements start the rock cycle by helping
    to form magma, the source of igneous rocks.
  • Plate movements also cause faulting, folding, and
    other motions of the crust that help to form
    sedimentary and metamorphic rocks.

35
Rock Cycle Activity
- The Rock Cycle
  • Click the Active Art button to open a browser
    window and access Active Art about the rock cycle.

36
- The Rock Cycle
Igneous
Metamorphic
Sedimentary
37
Graphic Organizer
Metamorphic
Igneous
Organic
Foliated
Extrusive
Chemical
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