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Textures of Basalts and Gabbros
Introduction
Basalts and gabbros are volcanic rocks that are common to the Earth, Moon, Mars, many
large asteroids, and probably to Mercury and Venus. From the Apollo Missions and
meteorites that we have received from the Moon, Mars, and asteroids, we have learned
that the general characteristics of all basaltic samples are very similar and for the most
part we can apply the textural characteristics of Earth rocks to those from extraterrestrial
sources. With some limitations, we can also constrain the physical and chemical
conditions under which these extraterrestrial rocks crystallized.
Textures
Texture refers to the degree of crystallinity, grain size, and fabric (geometrical
relationships) among the constituents of a rock. Textural features are probably the most
important aspect of an igneous rock because they are a necessary aid in understanding
the conditions under which igneous rocks crystallized (e.g., cooling and nucleation rates
and order of crystallization) that in turn depend on initial composition, temperature,
pressure, gaseous contents and the viscosity of the magma.
Degree of crystallinity - Rocks composed entirely of crystals are called holocrystalline;
those composed entirely of glass are holohyaline; rocks that contain both crystals and
glass are hypocrystalline.
Grain size - Overall, there is a distinction between the grain size of rocks that have
crystallized at depth and are medium to coarse grained (e. g., gabbros) and those that
crystallized at shallow depth as dikes or were effusive are finer grained (e. g., basalts).
Grain sizes of terrestrial and meteorite igneous rocks are defined as follows:
Term Terrestrial Rocks Meteorites
Fine-grained < 1 mm < 0.5 mm
Medium-grained 1 - 5 mm 0.5 - 2 mm
Coarse-grained 5 mm - 3 cm 2 - 5 mm
Very coarse-grained > 3 cm > 5 mm
The cut-off grain size between basalt and gabbro for both sets of rocks is 2 mm.
Rock fabric- Fabric is the shape and mutual relationships among rock constituents:
1. Euhedral, idiomorphic, or automorphic refer to grains that are bounded by crystal
faces
2. Subhedral or hypidiomorphic are grains that are bounded by some crystal faces
3. Anhedral, allotrimorphic, or xenomorphic grains are devoid of crystal faces
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Terms
Essential textural terms (those that may be encounter in reading meteorite classifications
and research papers):
Amygdules - vesicles filled with low temperature or alteration minerals.
Cumulate - igneous rocks formed by the accumulation of early-formed minerals by
the action of gravity. Orthocumulates form when the intercumulus liquid is
compositionally different from earlier formed cumulate crystals and precipitates
different intercumulus minerals. Adcumulates form when the intercumulus liquid is
similar in composition to cumulate crystals and results in additional growth of
cumulus grains of similar composition. Adcumulates are essentially monomineralic,
although the growth boundary between the original cumulate grain and later
adcumulus growth is recognizable. Those rocks that are intermediate between
orthocumulates and adcumulates are called mesocumulates.
Cumulate texture - An olivine gabbro with cumulate olivine, plagioclase, pyroxene, and magnetite.
Plagioclase and magnetite are strongly oriented. Base width = 8 mm. Skaergaard Layered Intrusion
(stratiform structure), Lower Zone C. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Orthocumulate texture - Harzburgite with cumulate olivine and chromite and intercumulus
plagioclase. Stillwater Layered Intrusion. Width = 8 mm. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
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Granular- most of the grains are equant.
Granoblastic - typical of non-foliated metamorphic rocks without porphyroblasts.
Grains have sutured boundaries, are approximately equidimensional, and meet at
~120 triple junctions. Characteristic of recrystallization.
Recrystallization texture (granoblastic) - Mantle xenolith composed of polygonal grains of olivine and
pyroxene that recrystallized under deformational pressures at depth. Similar polygonal textures are
shown by metachondrites and "primitive achondrites" that have recrystallized from precursor
chondrites. Width = 13 mm. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Hyaloophitic- angular interstices between feldspars filled with glass.
Hypidiomorphicorhypautomorphic granular- the most common granular texture
in which a mixture of euhedral, subhedral, and anhedral grains are present.
Intergranular - angular interstices between feldspars occupied by pyroxenegranules (very small grains).
Intersertal- interstices filled with a mixture of glass and some pyroxene.
Matrix, groundmass, ormesostasis - fine-grained or glassy medium in which
large grains are set.
Ophitic texture - is one where random plagioclase laths are enclosed by pyroxene
or olivine. If plagioclase is larger and encloses the ferromagnesian minerals, then
the texture is subophitic and the laths typically impinge on one another to form sharp
angles. Note that the change from intergranular through subophitic to ophitic textures
in basaltic rocks results from slower cooling and slower nucleation rates. This
textural sequence is typically found at the margins toward the center in diabasic ordoleritic rocks (basaltic dikes) or from the chilled surface to depth of basaltic flows. If
the cooling rate is very fast, the interstitial material between plagioclase laths may
be quenched to glass to form an intersertal texture.
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Ophitic texture - An olivine gabbro that contains cumulate olivine and plagioclase in a matrix of
intercumulate pyroxene and magnetite (black) that crystallized from trapped intercumulate liquid.
Base width = 17 mm. From the Skaergaard layered intrusion (stratiform structure). Lower Zone A.
Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Subophitic texture - Poikilitic pyroxene (oikocrysts) grew between large plagioclase laths and
enclosed smaller plagioclase. Base width = 17 mm. Skaergaard Intrusion, Upper Border Group .
Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Pilotaxitic- rocks in which feldspar microlites (tiny grains) are arranged in a floworiented, felty matrix.
Porphyriticorphyric- refers to a rock that contains grains of distinctly different
sizes. Large crystals that are surrounded by finer-grained matrix are referred to as
phenocrysts. If the matrix or groundmass is glassy, then the rock has a vitrophyric
texture. Phenocrysts that cluster and grow together form a glomeroporphyritic
texture.
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Olivine phyric basalt - Phenocrysts of olivine and a glomerocryst of smaller olivine (purple) and
plagioclase set in an intergranular matrix of plagioclase and granular pyroxene. Width = 6 mm.
Maui, Hawaii. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Porphyritic or phyric texture - Olivine phenocrysts set in a fine-grained, intergranular matrix. Round
clear structures are gas vesicles. Olivine basalt from the DPSP (Deep Sea Drilling Program) Leg 34.
Base width = 8 mm. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Poikilitic texture - refers to small, typically euhedral crystals (chadacrysts), that areenclosed (included) within a much larger mineral of different composition. Unlike the
porphyritic texture, the large crystals known as oikocrysts, are devoid of crystal
faces. Chadacryst also refers to a grain that is foreign to the rest of the rock a.k.a.
xenocryst.
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Poikilitic texture. Orthopyroxene oikocryst that encloses rounded chadacrysts of olivine. Image
height = 17 mm. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Spherulitic- radial aggregates of acicular or fibrous crystals.Stratiform or layered igneous rocks - Mafic to ultramafic rocks in stratiform
intrusions are formed by crystal settling in much the same way that sedimentary
rocks form. The resulting textures and structures reflect sedimentary processes
controlled by gravity, density, viscosity, grain shapes and sizes, and magmatic
currents.
Variolitic(varioles) - divergent plagioclase laths with interstitial glass or intergrown
with pyroxene granules.
Multi-textured basalt - Plumose to variolitic texture on the right hand side intermingled with an
intersertal texture to the left. Width = 5 mm. DSDP Leg 16. Image T. E. Bunch, 2007.
Vesicles - cavities from expanded gases (vesicular texture).
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This document was last modified on: 08/06/2008 16:48:36 by James Wittke