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Laccolith

A laccolith is a body of intrusive rock with a dome-shaped upper surface and a level base, fed by a conduit from below. A laccolith forms when magma (molten rock) rising through the Earth's crust begins to spread out horizontally, prying apart the host rock strata. The pressure of the magma is high enough that the overlying strata are forced upward, giving the laccolith its dome-like form.

Cross section of a laccolith intruding into and deforming strata

Over time, erosion can expose the solidified laccolith, which is typically more resistant to weathering than the host rock. The exposed laccolith then forms a hill or mountain. The Henry Mountains of Utah, US, are an example of a mountain range composed of exposed laccoliths. It was here that geologist Grove Karl Gilbert carried out pioneering field work on this type of intrusion. Laccolith mountains have since been identified in many other parts of the world.

Basic types of intrusions:
1. Laccolith
2. Small dike
3. Batholith
4. Dike
5. Sill
6. Volcanic neck, pipe
7. Lopolith
Note: As a general rule, in contrast to the smoldering volcanic vent in the figure, these names refer to the fully cooled and usually millions-of-years-old rock formations, which are the result of the underground magmatic activity shown.

Description edit

A laccolith is a type of igneous intrusion, formed when magma forces its way upwards through the Earth's crust but cools and solidifies before reaching the surface. Laccoliths are distinguished from other igneous intrusions by their dome-shaped upper surface and level base. They are assumed to be fed by a conduit from below, though this is rarely exposed.[1][2] When the host rock is volcanic, the laccolith is referred to as a cryptodome.[3] Laccoliths form only at relatively shallow depth in the crust,[4] usually from intermediate composition magma, though laccoliths of all compositions from silica-poor basalt to silica-rich rhyolite are known.[5]

A laccolith forms after an initial sheet-like intrusion has been injected between layers of sedimentary rock. If the intrusion remains limited in size, it forms a sill, in which the strata above and below the intrusion remain parallel to each other and the intrusion remains sheetlike. The intrusion begins to lift and dome the overlying strata only if the radius of the intrusion exceeds a critical radius, which is roughly:[6]

 

where   is the pressure of the magma,   is the lithostatic pressure (weight of the overlying rock),   is the thickness of the overlying rocks, and   is the shear strength of the overlying rock. For example, in the Henry Mountains of Utah, US, the geologist Grove Karl Gilbert found in 1877 that sills were always less than 1 square kilometer (0.4 sq mi) in area while laccoliths were always greater than 1 square kilometer in area. From this, Gilbert concluded that sills were forerunners of laccoliths. Laccoliths formed from sills only when they became large enough for the pressure of the magma to force the overlying strata to dome upwards. Gilbert also determined that larger laccoliths formed at greater depth.[1] Both laccoliths and sills are classified as concordant intrusions, since the bulk of the intrusion does not cut across host rock strata, but intrudes between strata.[7]

More recent study of laccoliths has confirmed Gilbert's basic conclusions, while refining the details. Both sills and laccoliths have blunt rather than wedgelike edges, and sills of the Henry Mountains are typically up to 10 meters (33 ft) thick while laccoliths are up to 200 meters (660 ft) thick.[8] The periphery of a laccolith may be smooth, but it may also have fingerlike projections consistent with Rayleigh-Taylor instability of the magma pushing along the strata.[9] An example of a fingered laccolith is the Shonkin Sag laccolith in Montana, US.[4] The critical radius for the sill to laccolith transition is now thought to be affected the viscosity of the magma (being greater for less viscous magma) as well as the strength of the host rock. A modern formula for the shape of a laccolith is:

 
Idealized laccolith shape
 

where   is the height of the laccolith roof,   is the acceleration of gravity,   is the elastic modulus of the host rock,   is the horizontal distance from the center of the laccolith, and   is the outer radius of the laccolith.[4] Because of their greater thickness, which slows the cooling rate, the rock of laccoliths is usually coarser-grained than the rock of sills.[5]

The growth of laccoliths can take as little as a few months when associated with a single magma injection event,[10][11] or up to hundreds or thousands of years by multiple magmatic pulses stacking sills on top of each other and deforming the host rock incrementally.[12]

Over time, erosion can form small hills and even mountains around a central peak since the intrusive rock is usually more resistant to weathering than the host rock.[13] Because the emplacement of the laccolith domes up the overlying beds, local topographic relief is increased and erosion is accelerated, so that the overlying beds are eroded away to expose the intrusive cores.[14]

Etymology edit

The term was first applied as laccolite by Gilbert after his study of intrusions of diorite in the Henry Mountains of Utah in about 1875.[15][16] The word laccolith was derived in 1875–1880, from Greek lákko(s) 'pond' plus -lith 'stone'.[17]

Where laccoliths form edit

Laccoliths tend to form at relatively shallow depths and in some cases are formed by relatively viscous magmas, such as those that crystallize to diorite, granodiorite, and granite. In those cases cooling underground may take place slowly, giving time for larger crystals to form in the cooling magma. In other cases less viscous magma such as shonkinite may form phenocrysts of augite at depth, then inject through a vertical feeder dike that ends in a laccolith.[18]

Sheet intrusions tend to form perpendicular to the direction of least stress in the country rock they intrude. Thus laccoliths are characteristic of regions where the crust is being compressed and the direction of least stress is vertical, while areas where the crust is in tension are more likely to form dikes, since the direction of least stress is then horizontal. For example, the laccoliths of the Ortiz porphyry belt in New Mexico likely formed during Laramide compression of the region 33 to 36 million years ago. When Laramide compression was later replaced by extension, emplacement of sills and laccoliths was replaced by emplacement of dikes. Dating of the intrusions has helped determine the point in geologic time when compression was replaced with extension.[19]

Examples edit

In addition to the Henry Mountains, laccolith mountains are found on the nearby Colorado Plateau in the La Sal Mountains and Abajo Mountains.[14]

The filled and solidified magma chamber of Torres del Paine (Patagonia) is one of the best exposed laccoliths, built up incrementally by horizontal granitic and mafic magma intrusions over 162 ± 11 thousand years.[20] Horizontal sheeted intrusions were fed by vertical intrusions.[21]

The small Barber Hill syenite-stock laccolith in Charlotte, Vermont, has several volcanic trachyte dikes associated with it. Molybdenite is also visible in outcrops on this exposed laccolith. In Big Bend Ranch State Park, at the southwesternmost visible extent of the Ouachita orogeny, lies the Solitario.[22] It consists of the eroded remains of a laccolith, presumably named for the sense of solitude that observers within the structure might have, due to the partial illusion of endless expanse in all directions.[22]

One of the largest laccoliths in the United States is Pine Valley Mountain in the Pine Valley Mountain Wilderness area near St. George, Utah.[23]

A system of laccoliths is exposed on the Italian island of Elba, which form a "Christmas tree" laccolith system in which a single igneous plumbing system has produced multiple laccoliths at different levels in the crust.[24]

Problems reconstructing shapes of intrusions edit

The original shape of intrusions can be difficult to reconstruct. For instance, Devils Tower in Wyoming and Needle Rock in Colorado were both thought to be volcanic necks, but further study has suggested they are eroded laccoliths.[25][26] At Devils Tower, intrusion would have had to cool very slowly so as to form the slender pencil-shaped columns of phonolite porphyry seen today. However, erosion has stripped away the overlying and surrounding rock, so it is impossible to reconstruct the original shape of the igneous intrusion, which may or may not be the remnant of a laccolith. At other localities, such as in the Henry Mountains and other isolated mountain ranges of the Colorado Plateau, some intrusions demonstrably have the classic shapes of laccoliths.[27]

Extraterrestrial laccoliths edit

There are many examples of possible laccoliths on the surface of the Moon. Some are centered in impact craters and may form as part of the post-impact evolution of the crater.[28] Others are located along possible faults or fissures.[29] Laccoliths on the Moon are much wider but less thick than those on Earth, due to the Moon's lower gravity and more fluid magmatism.[30]

Possible laccoliths have also been identified on Mars, in western Arcadia Planitia.[31]

Gallery edit

See also edit

  • Batholith – Large igneous rock intrusion
  • Lopolith – Lenticular igneous intrusion with a depressed central region
  • Stock – Smaller igneous intrusion

References edit

  1. ^ a b Philpotts, Anthony R.; Ague, Jay J. (2009). Principles of igneous and metamorphic petrology (2nd ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN 9780521880060.
  2. ^ Leong, Goh Cheng (1995-10-27). Certificate Physics And Human Geography; Indian Edition. Oxford University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-19-562816-6.
  3. ^ Burchardt, Steffi; Mattsson, Tobias; Palma, J. Octavio; Galland, Olivier; Almqvist, Bjarne; Mair, Karen; Jerram, Dougal A.; Hammer, Øyvind; Sun, Yang (2019-08-14). "Progressive Growth of the Cerro Bayo Cryptodome, Chachahuén Volcano, Argentina—Implications for Viscous Magma Emplacement". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 124 (8): 7934–7961. Bibcode:2019JGRB..124.7934B. doi:10.1029/2019JB017543. ISSN 2169-9313.
  4. ^ a b c Philpotts & Ague 2009, p. 95.
  5. ^ a b Philpotts & Ague 2009, p. 94.
  6. ^ Philpotts & Ague 2009, equation 4.4, p.94.
  7. ^ Philpotts & Ague 2009, pp. 79–80.
  8. ^ Johnson, Arvid M.; Pollard, David D. (July 1973). "Mechanics of growth of some laccolithic intrusions in the Henry mountains, Utah, I". Tectonophysics. 18 (3–4): 261–309. doi:10.1016/0040-1951(73)90050-4.
  9. ^ Pollard, David D.; Muller, Otto H.; Dockstader, David R. (1 March 1975). "The Form and Growth of Fingered Sheet Intrusions". GSA Bulletin. 86 (3): 351–363. Bibcode:1975GSAB...86..351P. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1975)86<351:TFAGOF>2.0.CO;2.
  10. ^ Castro, Jonathan M.; Cordonnier, Benoit; Schipper, C. Ian; Tuffen, Hugh; Baumann, Tobias S.; Feisel, Yves (December 2016). "Rapid laccolith intrusion driven by explosive volcanic eruption". Nature Communications. 7 (1): 13585. Bibcode:2016NatCo...713585C. doi:10.1038/ncomms13585. ISSN 2041-1723. PMC 5123016. PMID 27876800.
  11. ^ Mattsson, Tobias; Burchardt, Steffi; Almqvist, Bjarne S. G.; Ronchin, Erika (2018-02-05). "Syn-Emplacement Fracturing in the Sandfell Laccolith, Eastern Iceland—Implications for Rhyolite Intrusion Growth and Volcanic Hazards". Frontiers in Earth Science. 6: 5. Bibcode:2018FrEaS...6....5M. doi:10.3389/feart.2018.00005. ISSN 2296-6463.
  12. ^ Morgan, Sven; Stanik, Amy; Horsman, Eric; Tikoff, Basil; de Saint Blanquat, Michel; Habert, Guillaume (April 2008). "Emplacement of multiple magma sheets and wall rock deformation: Trachyte Mesa intrusion, Henry Mountains, Utah". Journal of Structural Geology. 30 (4): 491–512. Bibcode:2008JSG....30..491M. doi:10.1016/j.jsg.2008.01.005.
  13. ^ Fillmore, Robert (2010). Geological evolution of the Colorado Plateau of eastern Utah and western Colorado, including the San Juan River, Natural Bridges, Canyonlands, Arches, and the Book Cliffs. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press. pp. 288–289. ISBN 9781607810049.
  14. ^ a b Fillmore 2010, pp. 292–293.
  15. ^ Gilbert, G.K. (1877). "Geology of the Henry Mountains". Monograph. Washington, D.C. pp. i-160. doi:10.3133/70038096.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  16. ^ Aber, James S. "Grove Karl Gilbert". academic.emporia.edu. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  17. ^ "laccolith". dictionary.com. Retrieved 29 December 2018.
  18. ^ "Beall, Joseph J." "Pseudo-Rhythmic Layering in the Square Butte Alkali-Gabbro Laccolith." American Mineralogist. 57:7-8 (July–August 1972).
  19. ^ Maynard, Steven R. (February 2005). "Laccoliths of the Ortiz porphyry belt, Santa Fe County, New Mexico" (PDF). New Mexico Geology. 27 (1). Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  20. ^ Leuthold, Julien; Müntener, Othmar; Baumgartner, Lukas; Putlitz, Benita; Ovtcharova, Maria; Schaltegger, Urs (2012). "Time resolved construction of a bimodal laccolith (Torres del Paine, Patagonia)". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 325–326: 85–92. Bibcode:2012E&PSL.325...85L. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2012.01.032.
  21. ^ Leuthold, Julien; Müntener, Othmar; Baumgartner, Lukas; Putlitz, Benita (2014). "Petrological constraints on the recycling of mafic crystal mushes and intrusion of braided sills in the Torres del Paine Mafic Complex (Patagonia)" (PDF). Journal of Petrology. 55 (5): 917–949. Bibcode:2014JPet...55..917L. doi:10.1093/petrology/egu011. hdl:20.500.11850/103136.
  22. ^ a b Spearing, Darwin. Roadside Geology of Texas. 1991. Mountain Press Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-87842-265-4.
  23. ^ Cook, E.F. (1957). "Geology of the Pine Valley Mountains Utah". Utah Geological and Mineralogical Studies (58): 1–111.
  24. ^ Rocchi, Sergio; Westerman, David S.; Dini, Andrea; Innocenti, Fabrizio; Tonarini, Sonia (1 November 2002). "Two-stage growth of laccoliths at Elba Island, Italy". Geology. 30 (11): 983–986. Bibcode:2002Geo....30..983R. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(2002)030<0983:TSGOLA>2.0.CO;2.
  25. ^ Vitaliano, Dorothy B. "Geomythology: geological origins of myths and legends" in Myth and Geology, ed. L. Piccardi and W. B. Masse, p. 1. Geological Society of London. ISBN 978-1-86239-216-8
  26. ^ "Noe, D. C., and Alexander T. Klink. OF-15-06 Geologic Map of the Crawford Quadrangle, Delta and Montrose Counties, Colorado. 1:24,000". Colorado Geological Survey. Retrieved 26 July 2019.
  27. ^ Jackson, Marie D.; Pollard, David D. (1 January 1988). "The laccolith-stock controversy: New results from the southern Henry Mountains, Utah". GSA Bulletin. 100 (1): 117–139. Bibcode:1988GSAB..100..117J. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1988)100<0117:TLSCNR>2.3.CO;2.
  28. ^ Wichman, R.W. and Schultz, P. H. (1996) Crater-Centered Laccoliths on the Moon: Modeling Intrusion Depth and Magmatic Pressure at the Crater Taruntius, Icarus, Volume 122, Issue 1, July 1996, pages 193-199. doi:10.1006/icar.1996.0118
  29. ^ Wöhler, Christian; Lena, Raffaello (December 2009). "Lunar intrusive domes: Morphometric analysis and laccolith modelling". Icarus. 204 (2): 381–398. Bibcode:2009Icar..204..381W. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2009.07.031.
  30. ^ Michaut, Chloé (17 May 2011). "Dynamics of magmatic intrusions in the upper crust: Theory and applications to laccoliths on Earth and the Moon" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research. 116 (B5): B05205. Bibcode:2011JGRB..116.5205M. doi:10.1029/2010JB008108.
  31. ^ Michaut, Chloé; Baratoux, David; Thorey, Clément (July 2013). "Magmatic intrusions and deglaciation at mid-latitude in the northern plains of Mars". Icarus. 225 (1): 602–613. Bibcode:2013Icar..225..602M. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2013.04.015.
  32. ^ Nabelek, Peter I. (2007). "Fluid evolution and kinetics of metamorphic reactions in calc-silicate contact aureoles—From H2O to CO2 and back". Geology. 35 (10): 927. Bibcode:2007Geo....35..927N. doi:10.1130/G24051A.1.
  33. ^ Georgiev, N.; Henry, B.; Jordanova, N.; Jordanova, D.; Naydenov, K. (2014). "Emplacement and fabric-forming conditions of plutons from structural and magnetic fabric analysis: A case study of the Plana pluton (Central Bulgaria)". Tectonophysics. 629: 138–154. Bibcode:2014Tectp.629..138G. doi:10.1016/j.tecto.2014.02.018.

Further reading edit

  • Blatt, Harvey; Tracy, Robert J. (1996). Petrology : igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic (2nd ed.). New York: W.H. Freeman. pp. 13–15. ISBN 0-7167-2438-3.
  • Friedman, Jules D.; Huffman, Curtis Jr., eds. (1998). "Laccolith Complexes of Southeastern Utah: Time of Emplacement and Tectonic Setting — Workshop Proceedings". United States Geological Survey Bulletin. 2158. doi:10.3133/B2158.
  • Hyndman, D. W.; Alt, D. (November 1987). "Radial Dikes, Laccoliths, and Gelatin Models". The Journal of Geology. 95 (6): 763–774. Bibcode:1987JG.....95..763H. doi:10.1086/629176. S2CID 128562770.

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of laccolith at Wiktionary

laccolith, hydrolaccolith, mound, earth, covered, formed, frost, subarctic, environments, pingo, laccolith, body, intrusive, rock, with, dome, shaped, upper, surface, level, base, conduit, from, below, laccolith, forms, when, magma, molten, rock, rising, throu. For hydrolaccolith a mound of earth covered ice formed by frost in subarctic environments see Pingo A laccolith is a body of intrusive rock with a dome shaped upper surface and a level base fed by a conduit from below A laccolith forms when magma molten rock rising through the Earth s crust begins to spread out horizontally prying apart the host rock strata The pressure of the magma is high enough that the overlying strata are forced upward giving the laccolith its dome like form Cross section of a laccolith intruding into and deforming strataOver time erosion can expose the solidified laccolith which is typically more resistant to weathering than the host rock The exposed laccolith then forms a hill or mountain The Henry Mountains of Utah US are an example of a mountain range composed of exposed laccoliths It was here that geologist Grove Karl Gilbert carried out pioneering field work on this type of intrusion Laccolith mountains have since been identified in many other parts of the world Basic types of intrusions 1 Laccolith 2 Small dike 3 Batholith 4 Dike 5 Sill 6 Volcanic neck pipe 7 Lopolith Note As a general rule in contrast to the smoldering volcanic vent in the figure these names refer to the fully cooled and usually millions of years old rock formations which are the result of the underground magmatic activity shown Contents 1 Description 2 Etymology 3 Where laccoliths form 4 Examples 5 Problems reconstructing shapes of intrusions 6 Extraterrestrial laccoliths 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDescription editA laccolith is a type of igneous intrusion formed when magma forces its way upwards through the Earth s crust but cools and solidifies before reaching the surface Laccoliths are distinguished from other igneous intrusions by their dome shaped upper surface and level base They are assumed to be fed by a conduit from below though this is rarely exposed 1 2 When the host rock is volcanic the laccolith is referred to as a cryptodome 3 Laccoliths form only at relatively shallow depth in the crust 4 usually from intermediate composition magma though laccoliths of all compositions from silica poor basalt to silica rich rhyolite are known 5 A laccolith forms after an initial sheet like intrusion has been injected between layers of sedimentary rock If the intrusion remains limited in size it forms a sill in which the strata above and below the intrusion remain parallel to each other and the intrusion remains sheetlike The intrusion begins to lift and dome the overlying strata only if the radius of the intrusion exceeds a critical radius which is roughly 6 r 2 T t P m P l displaystyle r geq frac 2T tau P m P l nbsp where P m displaystyle P m nbsp is the pressure of the magma P l displaystyle P l nbsp is the lithostatic pressure weight of the overlying rock T displaystyle T nbsp is the thickness of the overlying rocks and t displaystyle tau nbsp is the shear strength of the overlying rock For example in the Henry Mountains of Utah US the geologist Grove Karl Gilbert found in 1877 that sills were always less than 1 square kilometer 0 4 sq mi in area while laccoliths were always greater than 1 square kilometer in area From this Gilbert concluded that sills were forerunners of laccoliths Laccoliths formed from sills only when they became large enough for the pressure of the magma to force the overlying strata to dome upwards Gilbert also determined that larger laccoliths formed at greater depth 1 Both laccoliths and sills are classified as concordant intrusions since the bulk of the intrusion does not cut across host rock strata but intrudes between strata 7 More recent study of laccoliths has confirmed Gilbert s basic conclusions while refining the details Both sills and laccoliths have blunt rather than wedgelike edges and sills of the Henry Mountains are typically up to 10 meters 33 ft thick while laccoliths are up to 200 meters 660 ft thick 8 The periphery of a laccolith may be smooth but it may also have fingerlike projections consistent with Rayleigh Taylor instability of the magma pushing along the strata 9 An example of a fingered laccolith is the Shonkin Sag laccolith in Montana US 4 The critical radius for the sill to laccolith transition is now thought to be affected the viscosity of the magma being greater for less viscous magma as well as the strength of the host rock A modern formula for the shape of a laccolith is nbsp Idealized laccolith shapez 3 P m r c g T 16 B T 3 r 0 2 r 2 2 displaystyle z frac 3 P m rho c gT 16BT 3 r 0 2 r 2 2 nbsp where z displaystyle z nbsp is the height of the laccolith roof g displaystyle g nbsp is the acceleration of gravity B displaystyle B nbsp is the elastic modulus of the host rock r displaystyle r nbsp is the horizontal distance from the center of the laccolith and r 0 displaystyle r 0 nbsp is the outer radius of the laccolith 4 Because of their greater thickness which slows the cooling rate the rock of laccoliths is usually coarser grained than the rock of sills 5 The growth of laccoliths can take as little as a few months when associated with a single magma injection event 10 11 or up to hundreds or thousands of years by multiple magmatic pulses stacking sills on top of each other and deforming the host rock incrementally 12 Over time erosion can form small hills and even mountains around a central peak since the intrusive rock is usually more resistant to weathering than the host rock 13 Because the emplacement of the laccolith domes up the overlying beds local topographic relief is increased and erosion is accelerated so that the overlying beds are eroded away to expose the intrusive cores 14 Etymology editThe term was first applied as laccolite by Gilbert after his study of intrusions of diorite in the Henry Mountains of Utah in about 1875 15 16 The word laccolith was derived in 1875 1880 from Greek lakko s pond plus lith stone 17 Where laccoliths form editLaccoliths tend to form at relatively shallow depths and in some cases are formed by relatively viscous magmas such as those that crystallize to diorite granodiorite and granite In those cases cooling underground may take place slowly giving time for larger crystals to form in the cooling magma In other cases less viscous magma such as shonkinite may form phenocrysts of augite at depth then inject through a vertical feeder dike that ends in a laccolith 18 Sheet intrusions tend to form perpendicular to the direction of least stress in the country rock they intrude Thus laccoliths are characteristic of regions where the crust is being compressed and the direction of least stress is vertical while areas where the crust is in tension are more likely to form dikes since the direction of least stress is then horizontal For example the laccoliths of the Ortiz porphyry belt in New Mexico likely formed during Laramide compression of the region 33 to 36 million years ago When Laramide compression was later replaced by extension emplacement of sills and laccoliths was replaced by emplacement of dikes Dating of the intrusions has helped determine the point in geologic time when compression was replaced with extension 19 Examples editIn addition to the Henry Mountains laccolith mountains are found on the nearby Colorado Plateau in the La Sal Mountains and Abajo Mountains 14 The filled and solidified magma chamber of Torres del Paine Patagonia is one of the best exposed laccoliths built up incrementally by horizontal granitic and mafic magma intrusions over 162 11 thousand years 20 Horizontal sheeted intrusions were fed by vertical intrusions 21 The small Barber Hill syenite stock laccolith in Charlotte Vermont has several volcanic trachyte dikes associated with it Molybdenite is also visible in outcrops on this exposed laccolith In Big Bend Ranch State Park at the southwesternmost visible extent of the Ouachita orogeny lies the Solitario 22 It consists of the eroded remains of a laccolith presumably named for the sense of solitude that observers within the structure might have due to the partial illusion of endless expanse in all directions 22 One of the largest laccoliths in the United States is Pine Valley Mountain in the Pine Valley Mountain Wilderness area near St George Utah 23 A system of laccoliths is exposed on the Italian island of Elba which form a Christmas tree laccolith system in which a single igneous plumbing system has produced multiple laccoliths at different levels in the crust 24 Problems reconstructing shapes of intrusions editThe original shape of intrusions can be difficult to reconstruct For instance Devils Tower in Wyoming and Needle Rock in Colorado were both thought to be volcanic necks but further study has suggested they are eroded laccoliths 25 26 At Devils Tower intrusion would have had to cool very slowly so as to form the slender pencil shaped columns of phonolite porphyry seen today However erosion has stripped away the overlying and surrounding rock so it is impossible to reconstruct the original shape of the igneous intrusion which may or may not be the remnant of a laccolith At other localities such as in the Henry Mountains and other isolated mountain ranges of the Colorado Plateau some intrusions demonstrably have the classic shapes of laccoliths 27 Extraterrestrial laccoliths editThere are many examples of possible laccoliths on the surface of the Moon Some are centered in impact craters and may form as part of the post impact evolution of the crater 28 Others are located along possible faults or fissures 29 Laccoliths on the Moon are much wider but less thick than those on Earth due to the Moon s lower gravity and more fluid magmatism 30 Possible laccoliths have also been identified on Mars in western Arcadia Planitia 31 Gallery edit nbsp Dolerite intrusion laccolith in Sydney Australia nbsp Laccolith exposed by erosion of overlying strata in Montana nbsp Pink monzonite laccolith intrudes within the grey Cambrian and Ordovician strata near Notch Peak Utah 32 nbsp The eroded laccolith on the top of Vitosha 33 the domed mountain next to Sofia BulgariaSee also editBatholith Large igneous rock intrusion Lopolith Lenticular igneous intrusion with a depressed central region Stock Smaller igneous intrusionReferences edit a b Philpotts Anthony R Ague Jay J 2009 Principles of igneous and metamorphic petrology 2nd ed Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 93 94 ISBN 9780521880060 Leong Goh Cheng 1995 10 27 Certificate Physics And Human Geography Indian Edition Oxford University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 19 562816 6 Burchardt Steffi Mattsson Tobias Palma J Octavio Galland Olivier Almqvist Bjarne Mair Karen Jerram Dougal A Hammer Oyvind Sun Yang 2019 08 14 Progressive Growth of the Cerro Bayo Cryptodome Chachahuen Volcano Argentina Implications for Viscous Magma Emplacement Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth 124 8 7934 7961 Bibcode 2019JGRB 124 7934B doi 10 1029 2019JB017543 ISSN 2169 9313 a b c Philpotts amp Ague 2009 p 95 a b Philpotts amp Ague 2009 p 94 Philpotts amp Ague 2009 equation 4 4 p 94 Philpotts amp Ague 2009 pp 79 80 Johnson Arvid M Pollard David D July 1973 Mechanics of growth of some laccolithic intrusions in the Henry mountains Utah I Tectonophysics 18 3 4 261 309 doi 10 1016 0040 1951 73 90050 4 Pollard David D Muller Otto H Dockstader David R 1 March 1975 The Form and Growth of Fingered Sheet Intrusions GSA Bulletin 86 3 351 363 Bibcode 1975GSAB 86 351P doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1975 86 lt 351 TFAGOF gt 2 0 CO 2 Castro Jonathan M Cordonnier Benoit Schipper C Ian Tuffen Hugh Baumann Tobias S Feisel Yves December 2016 Rapid laccolith intrusion driven by explosive volcanic eruption Nature Communications 7 1 13585 Bibcode 2016NatCo 713585C doi 10 1038 ncomms13585 ISSN 2041 1723 PMC 5123016 PMID 27876800 Mattsson Tobias Burchardt Steffi Almqvist Bjarne S G Ronchin Erika 2018 02 05 Syn Emplacement Fracturing in the Sandfell Laccolith Eastern Iceland Implications for Rhyolite Intrusion Growth and Volcanic Hazards Frontiers in Earth Science 6 5 Bibcode 2018FrEaS 6 5M doi 10 3389 feart 2018 00005 ISSN 2296 6463 Morgan Sven Stanik Amy Horsman Eric Tikoff Basil de Saint Blanquat Michel Habert Guillaume April 2008 Emplacement of multiple magma sheets and wall rock deformation Trachyte Mesa intrusion Henry Mountains Utah Journal of Structural Geology 30 4 491 512 Bibcode 2008JSG 30 491M doi 10 1016 j jsg 2008 01 005 Fillmore Robert 2010 Geological evolution of the Colorado Plateau of eastern Utah and western Colorado including the San Juan River Natural Bridges Canyonlands Arches and the Book Cliffs Salt Lake City University of Utah Press pp 288 289 ISBN 9781607810049 a b Fillmore 2010 pp 292 293 Gilbert G K 1877 Geology of the Henry Mountains Monograph Washington D C pp i 160 doi 10 3133 70038096 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Aber James S Grove Karl Gilbert academic emporia edu Retrieved 29 December 2018 laccolith dictionary com Retrieved 29 December 2018 Beall Joseph J Pseudo Rhythmic Layering in the Square Butte Alkali Gabbro Laccolith American Mineralogist 57 7 8 July August 1972 Maynard Steven R February 2005 Laccoliths of the Ortiz porphyry belt Santa Fe County New Mexico PDF New Mexico Geology 27 1 Retrieved 8 June 2020 Leuthold Julien Muntener Othmar Baumgartner Lukas Putlitz Benita Ovtcharova Maria Schaltegger Urs 2012 Time resolved construction of a bimodal laccolith Torres del Paine Patagonia Earth and Planetary Science Letters 325 326 85 92 Bibcode 2012E amp PSL 325 85L doi 10 1016 j epsl 2012 01 032 Leuthold Julien Muntener Othmar Baumgartner Lukas Putlitz Benita 2014 Petrological constraints on the recycling of mafic crystal mushes and intrusion of braided sills in the Torres del Paine Mafic Complex Patagonia PDF Journal of Petrology 55 5 917 949 Bibcode 2014JPet 55 917L doi 10 1093 petrology egu011 hdl 20 500 11850 103136 a b Spearing Darwin Roadside Geology of Texas 1991 Mountain Press Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 87842 265 4 Cook E F 1957 Geology of the Pine Valley Mountains Utah Utah Geological and Mineralogical Studies 58 1 111 Rocchi Sergio Westerman David S Dini Andrea Innocenti Fabrizio Tonarini Sonia 1 November 2002 Two stage growth of laccoliths at Elba Island Italy Geology 30 11 983 986 Bibcode 2002Geo 30 983R doi 10 1130 0091 7613 2002 030 lt 0983 TSGOLA gt 2 0 CO 2 Vitaliano Dorothy B Geomythology geological origins of myths and legends in Myth and Geology ed L Piccardi and W B Masse p 1 Geological Society of London ISBN 978 1 86239 216 8 Noe D C and Alexander T Klink OF 15 06 Geologic Map of the Crawford Quadrangle Delta and Montrose Counties Colorado 1 24 000 Colorado Geological Survey Retrieved 26 July 2019 Jackson Marie D Pollard David D 1 January 1988 The laccolith stock controversy New results from the southern Henry Mountains Utah GSA Bulletin 100 1 117 139 Bibcode 1988GSAB 100 117J doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1988 100 lt 0117 TLSCNR gt 2 3 CO 2 Wichman R W and Schultz P H 1996 Crater Centered Laccoliths on the Moon Modeling Intrusion Depth and Magmatic Pressure at the Crater Taruntius Icarus Volume 122 Issue 1 July 1996 pages 193 199 doi 10 1006 icar 1996 0118 Wohler Christian Lena Raffaello December 2009 Lunar intrusive domes Morphometric analysis and laccolith modelling Icarus 204 2 381 398 Bibcode 2009Icar 204 381W doi 10 1016 j icarus 2009 07 031 Michaut Chloe 17 May 2011 Dynamics of magmatic intrusions in the upper crust Theory and applications to laccoliths on Earth and the Moon PDF Journal of Geophysical Research 116 B5 B05205 Bibcode 2011JGRB 116 5205M doi 10 1029 2010JB008108 Michaut Chloe Baratoux David Thorey Clement July 2013 Magmatic intrusions and deglaciation at mid latitude in the northern plains of Mars Icarus 225 1 602 613 Bibcode 2013Icar 225 602M doi 10 1016 j icarus 2013 04 015 Nabelek Peter I 2007 Fluid evolution and kinetics of metamorphic reactions in calc silicate contact aureoles From H2O to CO2 and back Geology 35 10 927 Bibcode 2007Geo 35 927N doi 10 1130 G24051A 1 Georgiev N Henry B Jordanova N Jordanova D Naydenov K 2014 Emplacement and fabric forming conditions of plutons from structural and magnetic fabric analysis A case study of the Plana pluton Central Bulgaria Tectonophysics 629 138 154 Bibcode 2014Tectp 629 138G doi 10 1016 j tecto 2014 02 018 Further reading editBlatt Harvey Tracy Robert J 1996 Petrology igneous sedimentary and metamorphic 2nd ed New York W H Freeman pp 13 15 ISBN 0 7167 2438 3 Friedman Jules D Huffman Curtis Jr eds 1998 Laccolith Complexes of Southeastern Utah Time of Emplacement and Tectonic Setting Workshop Proceedings United States Geological Survey Bulletin 2158 doi 10 3133 B2158 Hyndman D W Alt D November 1987 Radial Dikes Laccoliths and Gelatin Models The Journal of Geology 95 6 763 774 Bibcode 1987JG 95 763H doi 10 1086 629176 S2CID 128562770 External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of laccolith at Wiktionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laccolith amp oldid 1183762573, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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