enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fractional crystallization (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractional_crystallization...

    In essence, fractional crystallization is the removal of early formed crystals from an originally homogeneous magma (for example, by gravity settling) so that these crystals are prevented from further reaction with the residual melt. [3] The composition of the remaining melt becomes relatively depleted in some components and enriched in others ...

  3. Igneous differentiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igneous_differentiation

    In geology, igneous differentiation, or magmatic differentiation, is an umbrella term for the various processes by which magmas undergo bulk chemical change during the partial melting process, cooling, emplacement, or eruption. The sequence of (usually increasingly silicic) magmas produced by igneous differentiation is known as a magma series.

  4. Magma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magma

    When enough rock is melted, the small globules of melt (generally occurring between mineral grains) link up and soften the rock. Under pressure within the earth, as little as a fraction of a percent of partial melting may be sufficient to cause melt to be squeezed from its source. [85] Melt rapidly separates from its source rock once the degree ...

  5. Bowen's reaction series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowen's_reaction_series

    Within the field of geology, Bowen's reaction series is the work of the Canadian petrologist Norman L. Bowen, [1] who summarized, based on experiments and observations of natural rocks, the sequence of crystallization of common silicate minerals from typical basaltic magma undergoing fractional crystallization (i.e. crystallization wherein early-formed crystals are removed from the magma by ...

  6. Cumulate rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumulate_rock

    Schematic diagrams showing the principles behind fractional crystallisation in a magma. While cooling, the magma evolves in composition because different minerals crystallize from the melt. 1: olivine crystallizes; 2: olivine and pyroxene crystallize; 3: pyroxene and plagioclase crystallize; 4: plagioclase crystallizes. At the bottom of the ...

  7. Magmatism along strike-slip faults - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magmatism_along_strike...

    This causes the hydrated minerals to emit volatiles – water vapour and gases – which are driven upward and dissolved into the mantle which lowers the melting temperature of constituent minerals, allowing them to melt to form magma. [11] Compression and rock melting - In a high strain compressional environment, additional strain energy can ...

  8. Planetary differentiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_differentiation

    Magma in the Earth is produced by partial melting of a source rock, ultimately in the mantle. The melt extracts a large portion of the "incompatible elements" from its source that are not stable in the major minerals. When magma rises above a certain depth the dissolved minerals start to crystallize at particular pressures and temperatures.

  9. Metamorphism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamorphism

    Metamorphism is the set of processes by which existing rock is transformed physically or chemically at elevated temperature, without actually melting to any great degree. The importance of heating in the formation of metamorphic rock was first recognized by the pioneering Scottish naturalist, James Hutton , who is often described as the father ...