magma: The term used to describe the liquid when it is within the Earth's crust or mantle.
lava: The term used to describe the liquid when it has reached the surface of the Earth.
Classification
The Classification of igneous rocks is based on a combination
of chemical composition and texture.
Compositional ranges of some important igneous rocks are shown in the
following table:
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Textures vary widely in igneous rocks. In terms of classifying igneous rocks, the most important texture is the grain size. The grain size of an igneous rock is primarily controlled by the rate at which the magma or lava cools and crystallizes. Magmas that do not rise to the surface but cool at depth are known as intrusive. Because they are surrounded by heat-insulating rock, they crystallize slowly, and consequently have the opportunity to grow large crystals. At the other extreme, liquids that are quenched (nearly instantaneous cooling) have no time or opportunity to grow minerals at all, and thus freeze into a glass. Lavas that erupt on the surface are known as extrusive. These lavas cool relatively quickly, but do crystallize minerals. These, however, are often too small to be seen with the naked eye.
By combining composition and grain size, we arrive at the following
classification for the igneous rocks:
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Additional characteristics of these rocks are as follows:
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Minerals | olivine | pyroxene | muscovite & biotite |
pyroxene | amphibole | quartz | |
Ca-rich plagioclase | intermediate plagioclase | Na-rich plagioclase | |
Color Index |
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Eruption Temperature |
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Wt. % SiO2 |
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Volatile content |
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Temperatures and compositions are shown, not because you should memorize them, but in order to demonstrate primary controls on a magma's or lava's viscosity. For all silicate liquids, viscosity is primarily controlled by temperature and SiO2 . The higher the temperature, the lower the viscosity, and the more fluid the magma is. In contrast, the higher the SiO2-content, the higher the viscosity. This is a result of the fact that liquids with higher SiO2-contents will be more polymerized and consequently more "sticky". Note that these two parameters combine to make mafic magmas/lavas very fluid, and sialic magmas/lavas very viscous. Consequently, mafic magmas almost always are capable of rising through the crust to erupt at the surface. Hence, basalts are very common, but gabbros are rare. At the other extreme, sialic magmas are very viscous (sticky) and have difficulty rising through the crust to erupt at the surface. Hence granites are very common and rhyolites more rare.
Viscosity combines with the volatile content to largely control the style and explosivity of volcanic eruptions. Low viscosity liquids allow volatiles to separate from the liquid easily. On the other hand, high viscosity liquids hinder the separation of a gas phase and consequently allow gas pressure to build up. At one extreme, basaltic eruptions are typically not explosive, because of the low viscosity and low volatile contents. Sialic eruptions, however, can be extremely explosive due to the build-up of very high gas pressures prior to the eruption.
Origin of the Three Primary Magma Types
Basalt. We have seen previously that basaltic rocks
form the bulk of the oceanic crust. Basaltic lavas are erupted at
mid-ocean ridges and subsequently move away from the ridge by sea floor
spreading. The source for the magma is partial melting of peridotite
in the asthenosphere. Upwelling convection currents in the asthenosphere
bring hot, partially melted peridotite close to the surface. Typical
peridotite, if partially melted about 5% yields a liquid with the composition
of basalt.
Granite. Sialic magmas such as granite/rhyolite
cannot form by melting of the mantle. They require melting of a parent
material considerably more rich in Si and Al. Such parent material
is only found in the continental crust. Partial melting of the continental
crust is therefore the source for sialic magmas.
Melting of the
crust, however, is not completely straightforward. As illustrated
in the figure to the left, temperatures required for melting under dry
conditions exceed those attained in normal continental crust. Note
that even under high heat-flow conditions typical of the ocean basins,
temperatures would not be high enough to melt dry material until depths
in excess of 100 km -- about three times the thickness of normal continental
crust. The disparity is worse for normal continental geothermal gradients.
Note, however, that the situation is drastically different if H2O
is present. H2O is a very effective fluxing agent for rock melting and
when present significantly lowers the melting temperature of crustal materials.
Consequently, whereas dry melting in unlikely in the continental crust,
"wet" melting is very possible.
Andesite. This rock type takes its name from the lavas erupted from volcanoes in the Andes. The rock is not, however, geographically restricted to the Andes, but is characteristic of all subduction-zone-related volcanoes, including those that make up the Cascades.
The close relationship to the process of subduction and the generation of andesititic magma implies a direct genetic link. As a subducting slab descends to progressive deeper levels in the mantle, it heats up, is metamorphosed and it releases volatiles such as H2O. There currently is some debate about whether or not the subducting slab actually melts to form andesite magma, or whether volatiles given off the slab flux the overlying mantle wedge and cause it to melt. Regardless of the details, it is clear that melting of either the slab or the overlying mantle as subduction proceeds produces andesite that rises to the surface to form chains of volcanoes inboard from the trench. In the Cascades, these volcanoes extend from Mt. Garibaldi in British Columbia, south through Washington and Oregon and extend into northern California to Mt. Lassen.
In addition
to some uncertainty as to the details of the partial melting process (slab
vs overlying mantle wedge) the evolution of andesite magma is complicated
by interaction with the crust as the magma migrates upward. The figure
to the left illustrates the commonly observed complexity of the crust below
old (now eroded) subduction-related volcanoes. Geologic features
include complexly deformed metamorphic rocks, numerous intrusions of diorite
batholiths and abundant evidence for interaction of andesitic magma with
crustal rocks.
Occurrence of the Three Primary Magma Types
Basalt. In oceanic terranes, basaltic volcanism
is dominant and frequent occurrence. Eruption of submarine basalt
along the mid-ocean ridges is an on-going phenomena, but seldom observed
except at places where the ridge rises above sea level (e.g., Iceland).
In addition, hot-spot activity can result in spectacular examples of basaltic
volcanism on large volcanic islands such as Hawaii. Owing to the
low viscosity and low volatile content, eruptions are non-explosive and
characterized by rapidly moving, long-traveled lava flows.
Although less common,
significant basaltic eruptions also occur on the continents. One
of the most spectacular examples is that of the Columbia River basalts
located in the Pacific Northwest. These basaltic lava flows erupted
from fissure vents near the Idaho-Oregon border between 17 and 6 Ma, and
flowed mainly westward. 311 individual flows have been recognized.
The total thickness is more than 3 miles and the total volume is estimated
at 42,000 cubic miles. To give some idea of how fluid these flows
were, some traveled more than 200 miles (all the way to the Pacific Ocean)
and speeds have been estimated at approximately 35 mph.
Andesite. As noted earlier, these rocks form above active subduction zones on both continental and oceanic plates. Eruptions typically result in the construction of large, steep-sided, composite or strato volcanoes made up of alternating lava flows and pyroclastic (ash) deposits. As documented by the 1980 eruption of Mt. Saint Helens, these volcanoes can be very explosive. [Click here to view the steps in the eruption sequence].
As explosive as Mt. Saint Helens seemed at the time of the 1980 eruption,
it was actually a relatively small eruption compared to other Andesite
volcanoes such as Mt. Pinatubo, or closer to home the devastating eruption
of Mt. Mazama which occurred 6,600 years ago. For comparison, the
St. Helens eruption released between 1 and 2 cubic kilometers of material
in the form of volcanic ash. Mazama, released approximately 75
km3! The eruption was sufficiently explosive to send ash as far
north as central Alberta and as far east as central Wyoming. The
eruption so shattered the volcano that when the underlying magma chamber
was drained the remains of the volcano collapsed into the void created
in the chamber, thus forming Crater Lake. [Click here
to view the steps in the eruption sequence].
Granite. The high viscosity of sialic magma makes it difficult for such magmas to reach the surface. Consequently, rocks in this compositional range are most commonly found as intrusive varieties. Large granitic batholiths are typically found in tectonic regions undergoing mountain building and metamorphism. Often, these intrusion result in very large batholiths that comprise a significant portion of the local continental crust. In western North America, for example, granitic batholiths include the Sierra Nevada Batholith, the Idaho Batholith, and the British Columbia Batholith.
Rhyolite. Although much less common than granite,
rhyolite eruptions are important because they are by far the most explosive
of all volcanic phenomena. The high viscosity and the high volatile
content combine to result in the build-up of enormous pressure as gasses
separate from the silicate liquid. In addition to being very explosive,
these eruptions produce enormous quantities of ash. The following
table compares some explosive eruptions:
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Mt. Saint Helens (andesite) |
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Mt. Mazama (andesite) |
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Mesa Falls (rhyolite) |
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Lava Creek (rhyolite) |
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Huckleberry Ridge (rhyolite) |
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The final three entries in this table are rhyolitic eruptions associated with the Snake River - Yellowstone hot spot. Volcanic ash from the Huckleberry Ridge eruption is recognized as far north as Saskatchewan, south into northern Mexico, and as far east as New Orleans. This was truly a major eruption.