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  2. Andesite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andesite

    Andesite is usually light to dark grey in colour, due to its content of hornblende or pyroxene minerals. [2] but can exhibit a wide range of shading. Darker andesite can be challenging to distinguish from basalt, but a common rule of thumb, used away from the laboratory, is that andesite has a color index less than 35. [9]

  3. List of rock types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rock_types

    Rhyodacite – Volcanic rock rich in silica and low in alkali metal oxides – A felsic volcanic rock which is intermediate between a rhyolite and a dacite; Rhyolite – Igneous, volcanic rock, of felsic (silica-rich) composition Comendite – Hard, peralkaline igneous rock, a type of light blue grey rhyolite

  4. Rhyolite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhyolite

    Rhyolite is common along convergent plate boundaries, where a slab of oceanic lithosphere is being subducted into the Earth's mantle beneath overriding oceanic or continental lithosphere. It can sometimes be the predominant igneous rock type in these settings. Rhyolite is more common when the overriding lithosphere is continental rather than ...

  5. Volcanic rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanic_rock

    Rhyolite is a volcanic rock with high silica content. Rhyolite has silica content similar to that of granite while basalt is compositionally equal to gabbro. Intermediate volcanic rocks include andesite, dacite, trachyte, and latite. [citation needed] Pyroclastic rocks are the product of explosive volcanism. They are often felsic (high in silica).

  6. Dacite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dacite

    Examples of this type of dacite outcrop are found in northwestern Montana and northeastern Bulgaria. Nevertheless, because of the moderately high silica content, dacitic magma is quite viscous [9] and therefore prone to explosive eruption. A notorious example of this is Mount St. Helens in which dacite domes formed from previous eruptions.

  7. Xenolith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xenolith

    Examples of xenocrysts are quartz crystals in a silica-deficient lava and diamonds within kimberlite diatremes. Xenoliths can be non-uniform within individual locations, even in areas which are spatially limited, e.g. rhyolite -dominated lava of Niijima volcano ( Japan ) contains two types of gabbroic xenoliths which are of different origin ...

  8. Types of volcanic eruptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_volcanic_eruptions

    In Peléan eruptions, a large amount of gas, dust, ash, and lava fragments are blown out the volcano's central crater, [31] driven by the collapse of rhyolite, dacite, and andesite lava domes that often creates large eruptive columns.

  9. Calc-alkaline magma series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calc-alkaline_magma_series

    The calc-alkaline magma series is one of two main subdivisions of the subalkaline magma series, the other subalkaline magma series being the tholeiitic series. A magma series is a series of compositions that describes the evolution of a mafic magma, which is high in magnesium and iron and produces basalt or gabbro, as it fractionally crystallizes to become a felsic magma, which is low in ...