enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Color index (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_index_(geology)

    Some examples of felsic rocks include granite and rhyolite, while examples of mafic rocks include gabbro and basalt. [1] According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, color indices, 0–50 are felsic, 50–90 are mafic, and 90–100 are ultramafic. [6] An online geology textbook provides an example of the use of another classification scheme, in ...

  3. Geochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geochemistry

    It is often separated from the others as the "alkali" or "soda" rocks, and there is a corresponding series of mafic rocks. Lastly, a small sub-group rich in olivine and without feldspar has been called the "ultramafic" rocks. They have very low percentages of silica but much iron and magnesia.

  4. Ultramafic rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultramafic_rock

    Peridotite, a type of ultramafic rock. Ultramafic rocks (also referred to as ultrabasic rocks, although the terms are not wholly equivalent) are igneous and meta-igneous rocks with a very low silica content (less than 45%), generally >18% MgO, high FeO, low potassium, and are usually composed of greater than 90% mafic minerals (dark colored, high magnesium and iron content).

  5. Farmington Gabbro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farmington_Gabbro

    The Mocksville Complex is surrounded by late Proterozoic granitic, metavolcanic, and gneissic that trends NE-SW over about a 500 km 2 area. [2] The complex contains evidence of felsic, mafic, and ultramafic rock types that have been metamorphosed (except farmington gabbro). [2]

  6. Appinite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appinite

    The rocks are therefore ultramafic, mafic and intermediate in their geochemical composition. Felsic end members can reach up to 72.1 weight % SiO 2. The SiO 2 contents correspond with the rock types cortlandtite (a melagabbro), hornblendite, hornblende diorite, meladiorite and diorite, the felsic end members with granodiorite till granite.

  7. Metamorphic zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamorphic_zone

    The main lithologies are ultramafic, mafic, felsic (or quartzo-feldspathic), pelitic and calcareous. In all of these (and other) lithologies, different combinations of minerals occur at a certain grade. The metamorphic zones in these lithologies can also be different.

  8. Layered intrusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layered_intrusion

    This is particularly true of a series of ultramafic-mafic layered intrusions in the Yilgarn Craton of ~2.8 Ga and associated komatiite volcanism and widespread tholeiitic volcanism. Plume magmatism is an effective mechanism for explaining the large volumes of magmatism required to inflate an intrusion to several kilometres thickness (up to and ...

  9. Intermediate composition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermediate_composition

    In igneous petrology, an intermediate composition refers to the chemical composition of a rock that has 51.5–63 wt% SiO 2 being an intermediate between felsic and mafic compositions. Typical intermediate rocks include andesite and trachyandesite among volcanic rocks and diorite and granodiorite among plutonic rocks .