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intrusion
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intrusion

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Igneous intrusions can be a variety of shapes and sizes. Laccoliths are domed circular shapes, and can be many miles across. Sills are intrusions that flow between rock layers. Pipes or necks connect the underlying magma chamber to surface volcanoes.

Mass of igneous rock that has formed by ‘injection’ of molten rock, or magma, into existing cracks beneath the surface of the Earth, as distinct from a volcanic rock mass which has erupted from the surface. Intrusion features include vertical cylindrical structures such as stocks, pipes, and necks; sheet structures such as dykes that cut across the strata and sills that push between them; laccoliths, which are blisters that push up the overlying rock; and batholiths, which represent chambers of solidified magma and contain vast volumes of rock.


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nbsp;enormous mass of intrusive igneous rock, that is, rock made of once-molten material that has solidified below the earth's surface (see rock).
nbsp;enormous mass of intrusive igneous rock, that is, rock made of once-molten material that has solidified below the earth's surface (see rock).
nbsp;enormous mass of intrusive igneous rock, that is, rock made of once-molten material that has solidified below the earth's surface (see rock).
 
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