Rocks: Three Types of Rocks
Rocks: Three Types of Rocks
Earth is a solid rock to a depth of 2,900 kilometers, where mantle meets the liquid outer core. A
rock is a naturally occurring solid aggregate of one or more minerals. The aggregate minerals
forming the rocks are held together by chemical bonds. Grains can be different in color, texture,
and sizes. Geologists then group rocks into three categories based on how the rocks form:
igneous sedimentary and metamorphic rock. Petrology is the scientific study of rocks.
Petrologists classify rocks based on how they were formed.
1. Igneous- formed from hardening and crystallization of magma or molten material that
originates deep within the earth.
A. Extrusive/Volcanic rock - forms when magma makes its way to Earth’s surface as lava
and then cools. The crystals are very small (fine grained) since the cooling process is fast.
B. Intrusive/Plutonic - It cools slowly beneath the Earth surface and are created by
magma. The intrusive igneous rocks have very large crystals (coarse grained).
1. Composition
2. Sedimentary rocks provide information about surface conditions that existed in the
Earth’s past.
●Particles of sand, shells, pebbles, and other fragments of materials called sediments, accumulate in
layers and over long period of time harden into rocks.
1. Regional-due to changes in pressure and temperature over large region of the crust
2. Contact-mainly by heat due to contact with magma
Classification:
a. Texture - refers to the size arrangement ad grains within the rock.
b. Foliation - any planar arrangement of mineral grains or structural features within the rock.