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extrusive rock
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extrusive rock

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Volcanic vent in the crater floor of Kilauea, Hawaii, USA.
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Bartolomé, one of the smallest of the Galapagos Islands, with the lava sheet of Sulivan Bay on neighbouring Santiago Island in the background. The Galapagos archipelago represents the tips of massive underwater volcanoes, which remain active. The Sulivan Bay lava sheet was formed after an eruption at the beginning of the 20th century. Bartolomé is noted for its barren, cinder slopes and cones formed by the ejection of gas and molten rock.

Igneous rock formed on the surface of the Earth by volcanic activity (as opposed to intrusive, or plutonic, rocks that solidify below the Earth's surface). Magma (molten rock) erupted from volcanoes cools and solidifies quickly on the surface. The crystals that form do not have time to grow very large, so most extrusive rocks are finely grained. The term includes fine-grained crystalline or glassy rocks formed from hot lava quenched at or near Earth's surface, and those made of welded fragments of ash and glass ejected into the air during a volcanic eruption. The formation of extrusive igneous rock is part of the rock cycle.

Large amounts of extrusive rock called basalt form at the Earth's ocean ridges from lava that fills the void formed when two tectonic plates spread apart. Explosive volcanoes that deposit pyroclastics generally occur where one tectonic plate descends beneath another. Andesite is often formed by explosive volcanoes. Magmas that give rise to pyroclastic extrusive rocks are explosive because they are viscous. The island of Montserrat, West Indies, is an example of an explosive volcano that spews pyroclastics of andesite composition. Magmas that produce crystalline or glassy volcanic rocks upon cooling are less viscous. The low viscosity allows the extruding lava to flow easily. Fluid-like lavas that flow from the volcanoes of the Hawaiian Islands have low viscosity and cool to form basalt.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
4 million cubic km (Coffin and Eldholm, 2001) for combined extrusive (6 million cubic km) and intrusive components (Courtillot and Renne, 2003).
But studies of ophiolites suggested that the structure of the crust was more complex: The basalts in the upper, extrusive layer had different compositions and magnetic properties than the underlying layer of so-called sheeted dikes (relicts of the channels used by lavas to get to the surface).
He was engaged by the company to examine volcanic extrusive and intrusive rocks and their contact relationships with one another, and to give his opinion as to whether they were pre- or post-mineral in age and whether they were part of a caldera sequence.
 
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