'Granophyre' (
IPA: , from
granite and ''porphyry'') is an
igneous rock that contains
quartz and alkali
feldspar in characteristic angular intergrowths such as those in the accompanying image.

Polarized light microscope image of an intergrowth of quartz and alkali feldspar in a granophyre (Muskox Intrusion), as seen in thin section (Long dimension is 1.5 mm)
The
texture is called 'granophyric'. The texture can be similar to
micrographic texture and to the coarser graphic intergrowths of quartz and alkali feldspar common in
pegmatite. These textures document simultaneous crystallization of quartz and feldspar from a silicate melt at the
eutectic point, perhaps in the presence of a water-rich phase.
Granophyres typically are intrusive rocks that crystallized at shallow depths, and many have compositions similar to those of
granites. A common occurrence of granophyre is within layered igneous intrusions dominated by rocks with compositions like that of
gabbro. In such occurrences, the granophyre may form as an end product of
fractional crystallization of a parent mafic
magma, or by melting of rocks into which the mafic magma was emplaced, or by a combination of the two processes.
See also
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Micrographic texture
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Rock microstructure
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Granite
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Eutectic
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Solidus