
Basalt
'Basalt' (
IPA: ) is a common gray to black
extrusive volcanic rock. It is usually fine-grained due to rapid cooling of
lava on the Earth's surface. It may be
porphyritic containing larger crystals in a fine
matrix, or
vesicular, or frothy
scoria. Unweathered basalt is black or gray.
Basalt magmas have formed by
decompression melting of the
Earth's mantle and by partial melting of rock in the interiors of
Mars and the Earth's
moon. Source rocks for the partial melts probably include both
peridotite and
pyroxenite (e.g., Sobolev et al., 2007). The crustal portions of
oceanic
tectonic plates are composed predominantly of basalt, produced from upwelling mantle below
ocean ridges.
Pliny used the word basalt and it is said to have had an
Ethiopian origin, meaning a black stone.
The term basalt is at times applied to shallow
intrusive rocks with a composition typical of basalt, but rocks of this composition with a
phaneritic (coarse) groundmass are generally referred to as
dolerite (also called
diabase) or
gabbro.

Columnar basalt at Sheepeater Cliff in Yellowstone
Types of basalt

Large masses must cool slowly to form a polygonal fracture pattern
★
Tholeiitic basalt is relatively poor in
silica and poor in
sodium. Included in this category are most basalts of the
ocean floor, most large oceanic islands, and continental
flood basalts such as the Columbia River Plateau.
★
★ ''MORB'' (Mid Ocean Ridge Basalt), is characteristically low in
incompatible elements. MORB is commonly erupted only at ocean ridges. MORB itself has been subdivided into varieties such as ''NMORB'' and ''EMORB'' (slightly more enriched in incompatible elements).
[1] [2]
★ ''High alumina basalt'' may be silica-undersaturated or -oversaturated (see
normative mineralogy). Has greater than 17%
alumina (Al
2O
3) and is intermediate in composition between tholeiite and alkaline basalt; the relatively alumina-rich composition is based on rocks without
phenocrysts of plagioclase.
★ ''Alkaline basalt'' is relatively poor in silica and rich in sodium. It is
silica-undersaturated and may contain
feldspathoids,
alkali feldspar and
phlogopite.
★
Boninite is a high-magnesium form of basalt or
andesite that is erupted generally in
back-arc basins, distinguished by its low titanium content and trace element composition.
Petrology
The mineralogy of basalt is characterized by a preponderance of calcic
plagioclase feldspar and
pyroxene.
Olivine can also be a significant constituent. Accessory
minerals present in relatively minor amounts include
iron oxides and iron-titanium oxides, such as
magnetite,
ulvospinel, and
ilmenite. Because of the presence of such oxide minerals, basalt can acquire strong
magnetic signatures as it cools, and
paleomagnetic studies have made extensive use of basalt.
In tholeiitic basalt,
pyroxene (
augite and
orthopyroxene or
pigeonite) and calcium-rich
plagioclase are common
phenocryst minerals. Olivine may also be a phenocryst, and when present, may have rims of
pigeonite. The
groundmass contains interstitial
quartz or
tridymite or
cristobalite. ''Olivine tholeiite'' has augite and orthopyroxene or pigeonite with abundant olivine, but olivine may have rims of pyroxene and is unlikely to be present in the groundmass.
In high-alumina basalts, phenocrysts of feldspar commonly are
bytownite in composition. Other common phenocryst minerals are olivine and augite; orthopyroxene is less common. Silica minerals and/or
alkali feldspar may be present in the groundmass.
Alkali basalts typically have mineral assemblages that lack
orthopyroxene but contain
olivine. Feldspar phenocrysts typically are
labradorite to
andesine in composition.
Augite is rich in titanium compared to augite in tholeiitic basalt. Minerals such as
alkali feldspar,
leucite,
nepheline,
sodalite,
phlogopite mica, and
apatite may be present in the groundmass.
Basalt has high
liquidus and
solidus temperatures -- values at the Earth's surface are near or above 1200 °C (liquidus) and near or below 1000 °C (solidus); these values are higher than those of other common igneous rocks.
The majority of tholeiites are formed at approximately 50-100 km depth within the mantle. Many alkali basalts may be formed at greater depths, perhaps as deep as 150-200 km. The origin of high-alumina basalt continues to be controversial, with interpretations that it is a
primary melt and that instead it is derived from other basalt types (e.g., Ozerov, 2000).
Geochemistry
Basalt compositions are rich in
MgO and
CaO and low in
SiO2 and
Na2O plus
K2O relative to most common igneous rocks, consistent with the
TAS classification.
Basalt generally has a composition of 45-55 wt% SiO
2, 2-6 wt% total alkalis, 0.5-2.0 wt%
TiO2, 5-14 wt%
FeO and 14 wt% or more
Al2O3. Contents of CaO are commonly near 10 wt%, those of MgO commonly in the range 5 to 12 wt%.
High alumina basalts have aluminium contents of 17-19 wt% Al
2O
3; boninites have magnesium contents of up to 15% MgO. Rare
feldspathoid-rich
mafic rocks, kin to alkali basalts, may have Na
2O plus K
2O contents of 12% or more.
MORB basalts and their intrusive equivalents,
gabbros, are the characteristic igneous rocks formed at
mid-ocean ridges. They are
tholeiites particularly low in total alkalis and in
incompatible trace elements, and they have relatively flat
REE patterns normalised to mantle or
chondrite values. In contrast, alkali basalts have normalized patterns highly enriched in the light REE, and with greater abundances of the REE and of other
incompatible elements. Because MORB basalt is considered a key to understanding plate tectonics, its compositions have been much studied. Although MORB compositions are distinctive relative to average compositions of basalts erupted in other environments, they are not uniform. For instance, compositions change with position along the Atlantic
mid-ocean ridge, and the compositions also define different ranges in different ocean basins (Hofmann, 2003).
Isotope ratios of elements such as
strontium,
neodymium,
lead,
hafnium, and
osmium in basalts have been much-studied, so as to learn about evolution of the
Earth's mantle. Isotopic ratios of noble gases, such as
3He/
4He, are also of great value: for instance, ratios for basalts range from 6 to 10 for mid-ocean ridge tholeiite (normalized to atmospheric values), but to 15-24+ for ocean island basalts thought to be derived from
mantle plumes.
Morphology and textures
The shape, structure and
texture of a basalt is diagnostic of the way it erupted and where it erupted - whether into the sea, in an explosive
cinder eruption or as creeping
pahoehoe lava flows, the classical image of
Hawaiian basalt eruptions.
Subaerial eruptions
Basalt which erupts under open air (that is,
subaerially) forms three distinct types of lava or volcanic deposits: scoria,
ash or cinder;
breccia and lava flows.
Basalt in the tops of subaerial lava flows and
cinder cones will often be highly
vesiculated, imparting a lightweight "frothy" texture to the rock. Basaltic cinders are often red, coloured by oxidised
iron from weathered iron-rich minerals such as
pyroxene.
‘A‘a types of blocky, cinder and breccia flows of thick, viscous basaltic magma are common in Hawaii and other basalts which erupt slightly cooler.
Pahoehoe is a highly fluid, hot form of basalt which tends to form thin aprons of molten lava which fill up hollows and form
lava lakes.
Lava tubes are common features of pahoehoe eruptions.
Basaltic
tuff or
pyroclastic rocks are rare but not unknown. Usually basalt is too hot and fluid to build up sufficient pressure to form explosive lava eruptions but occasionally this will happen by trapping of the lava within the volcanic throat and build up of volcanic gases. Hawaii's
Mauna Loa erupted in this way in the 19th century, as did
Mount Tarawera in its violent 1886 eruption. Another example is the 0.2Ma
Diamond Head Tuff, Hawaii.
Maar volcanoes are typical of small basalt tuffs, formed by explosive eruption of basalt through the crust, forming an apron of mixed basalt and wall rock breccia and a fan of basalt tuff further out from the volcano.
Amygdaloidal structure is common in relict
vesicles and beautifully
crystallized species of
zeolites,
quartz or
calcite are frequently found.
Columnar basalt
During the cooling of a thick lava flow, contractional
joints or fractures form. If a flow cools relatively rapidly, significant
contraction forces build up. While a flow can shrink in the vertical dimension without fracturing, it cannot easily accommodate shrinking in the horizontal direction unless cracks form. The extensive fracture network that develops results in the formation of columns. The topology of the lateral shapes of these columns can broadly be classed as a
random cellular network. These structures are often erroneously described as being predominantly hexagonal. In reality, the mean number of sides of all the columns in such a structure is indeed six (by geometrical definition), but polygons with a number of sides from three up to twelve or more can be observed
[3]. Note that the size of the columns depends loosely on the rate of cooling; very rapid cooling may result in very small (<1
cm diameter) columns, and vice versa.
Perhaps the most famous basalt flow in the world is the
Giant's Causeway on the northern coast of
Ireland, in which the vertical joints form
hexagonal columns and give the impression of having been artificially constructed.
An ancient 13th century religious complex, called
Nan Madol, was built on the Pacific island of
Pohnpei, using columnar basalt quarried from various locations on the island. The massive ruins remain to this day.
★ Famous columnar basalts:
★
★
Giant's Causeway
★
★
Devil's Postpile
★
★ Narooma Basalt,
Narooma, New South Wales,
Australia
★
★
Samson's ribs
★
★
Isle of Staffa, Inner Hebrides
★
★
Devil's Tower,
Wyoming
★
★
Pwisehn Malek ''Chickenshit Mountain'',
Pohnpei,
Federated States of Micronesia [4]
Submarine eruptions

Pillow basalts on the south Pacific seafloor
Pillow basalts
When basalt erupts underwater or flows into the sea, the cold water quenches the surface and the lava forms a distinctive ''pillow'' shape, through which the hot lava breaks to form another pillow. This ''pillow'' texture is very common in underwater basaltic flows and is diagnostic of an underwater eruption environment when found in ancient rocks. Pillows typically consist of a fine-grained core with a glassy crust and have radial jointing. Size of individual pillows vary from 10 cm up to several metres.
When ''pahoehoe'' lava enters the sea it usually forms pillow basalts. However when a'a enters the ocean it forms a
littoral cone, a small cone-shaped accumulation of tuffaceous debris formed when the blocky a'a lava enters the water and explodes from built-up steam.
The island of
Surtsey in the
Atlantic is a basalt volcano which breached the ocean surface in 1963. The initial phase of Surtsey's eruption was highly explosive, as the magma was quite wet, causing the rock to be blown apart by the boiling steam to form a tuff and cinder cone. This has subsequently moved to a typical pahoehoe type behaviour.
Glass may be present, particularly as rinds on rapidly chilled surfaces of lava flows, and is commonly (but not exclusively) associated with underwater eruptions.
Distribution

Paraná Traps, Brazil
The
lava flows of the
Deccan Traps in
India, the
Paraná Traps in Brazil, the
Siberian Traps in
Russia, the
Columbia River Plateau of
Washington and
Oregon, as well as parts of the
California inner coastal ranges in the
United States, as well as the
Triassic lavas of eastern
North America are basalts. Other famous accumulations of basalts include
Iceland and the islands of the
Hawaii volcanic chain, forming above a
mantle plume. Basalt is the rock most typical of
large igneous provinces.
Ancient
precambrian basalts are usually only found in fold and thrust belts, and are often heavily metamorphosed. These are known as
greenstone belts, because low-grade metamorphism of basalt produces chlorite, actinolite, epidote and other green-hued minerals.
Lunar and Martian basalt
The dark areas visible on Earth's
moon, the
lunar maria, are plains of flood basaltic lava flows. These rocks were sampled by the manned American
Apollo program, the robotic Russian
Luna program, and are represented among the
lunar meteorites.
Lunar basalts differ from their terrestrial counterparts principally in their high iron contents, which typically range from about 17 to 22 wt% FeO. They also possess a stunning range of titanium concentrations (present in the mineral ilmenite), ranging from less than 1 wt% TiO
2, to about 13 wt.%. Traditionally, lunar basalts have been classified according to their titanium content, with classes being named high-Ti, low-Ti, and very-low-Ti. Nevertheless, gobal geochemical maps of titanium obtained from the
Clementine mission demonstrate that the lunar maria possess a continuum of titanium concentrations, and that the highest concentrations are the least abundant.
Lunar basalts show exotic textures and mineralogy, particularly shock
metamorphism, lack of the oxidation typical of terrestrial basalts, and a complete lack of hydration. While most of the Moon's basalts erupted between about 3 and 3.5 billion years ago, the oldest samples are 4.2 billion years old, and the youngest flows, based on the age dating method of "crater counting," are estimated to have erupted only 1.2 billion years ago.
Basalt is also a common rock on the surface of
Mars, as determined by data sent back from the surface of Mars and by
Martian meteorites.
Metamorphism
Basalts are important rocks within
metamorphic belts, as they can provide vital information on the conditions of metamorphism within the belt. Various metamorphic
facies are named after the mineral assemblages and rock types formed by subjecting basalts to the temperatures and pressures of the metamorphic event. These are;
★
Greenschist facies
★
Blueschist facies
★
Zeolite facies
★
Granulite facies
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Eclogite facies
Metamorphosed basalts are important hosts for a variety of hydrothermal
ore deposits, including
gold deposits,
copper deposits,
volcanogenic massive sulfide ore deposits and others.
See also
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Basalt fiber
★
Mafic rocks
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Volcanoes
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Igneous rocks
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Flood basalt
References
1. See the PETDB database. Petrology of igneous and metamorphic rocks, Hyndman, Donald W., , , McGraw-Hill, 1985, ISBN 0-07-031658-9
2. Petrology, Blatt, Harvey and Robert Tracy, , , Freeman, 1996, ISBN 0-7167-2438-3
3. D. Weaire and N. Rivier. ''Contemporary Physics'' 25 1 (1984), pp. 55–99
4. http://www.pohnpeiheaven.com/pwisehn_malek.htm Alex Zuccarelli, 2003, ''Pohnpei-Between Time & Tide . Pwisehn Malek''
★ A. Y. Ozerov, ''The evolution of high-alumina basalts of the Klyuchevskoy volcano, Kamchatka, Russia, based on microprobe analyses of mineral inclusions.'' Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, v. 95, p. 65-79 (2000).
★ A. W. Hofmann, ''Sampling mantle heterogeneity through oceanic basalts: isotopes and trace elements.'' Treatise on Geochemistry Volume 2, pages 61-101 Elsevier Ltd. (2003). ISBN 0-08-044337-0 In March, 2007, the article was available on the web at http://www1.mpch-mainz.mpg.de/~geo/hofmann/Hofmann.mantle_heterogen1.pdf.
★ A. V. Sobolev and others, ''The amount of recycled crust in sources of mantle-derived melts.'' Science, v. 316, p. 412-417 (2007). http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/316/5823/412
External links
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Lava - water interface
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Pillow lava USGS
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Petrology of Lunar Rocks and Mare Basalts
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Basalt in Northern Ireland
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Basalt Columns