(Redirected from Picrite)
'Picrite basalt' is a variety of high-magnesium olivine
basalt that is very rich in the mineral
olivine. The rock type is also referred to as ''oceanite''. It is dark with yellow-green olivine
phenocrysts (20 to 50%) and black to dark brown
pyroxene, mostly
augite.
The olivine-rich picrite basalts that occur with the more common tholeiitic basalts of
Kīlauea and other volcanoes of the
Hawaiian Islands are the result of accumulation of olivine crystals either in a portion of the magma chamber or in a caldera lava lake. The compositions of these rocks are well-represented by mixes of olivine and more typical tholeiitic basalt.
The name "picrite" can also be applied to an olivine-rich alkali basalt: such picrite consists largely of
phenocrysts of olivine and titanium-rich
augite pyroxene with minor
plagioclase set in a groundmass of augite and more sodic plagioclase and perhaps
analcite and
biotite.
Picrites and komatiites are somewhat similar chemically, but differ in that
komatiite lavas are products of more magnesium-rich melts, and good examples exhibit the
spinifex texture. In contrast, picrites are magnesium-rich because crystals of olivine have accumulated in more normal melts by magmatic processes. Komatiites are largely restricted to the
Archean.
When the term ''oceanite'' was apparently first proposed by
Lacroix, he used the term to apply only to basalts with more than 50% olivine content (an extremely rare occurrence). Picrite basalt is found in the
lavas of
Mauna Kea and
Mauna Loa in
Hawaii,
Curaçao, in the
Piton de la Fournaise volcano on
Réunion Island and various other oceanic island volcanoes.
★ Picrite basalt has been erupted in historical times from
Mauna Loa during the eruptions of 1852 and 1868 (from different flanks of Mauna Loa).
★ Picrite basalt with 30% olivine commonly erupts from the
Piton de la Fournaise.
[1]
Common uses
Olivine basalt is a commonly used by foundries, boilermakers and boiler users to protect the area around a burner tip or to protect a floor from molten metal and other slag. Its use in this fashion is appropriate since olivine is a very refractory, high-melting temperature mineral.
References
★ Carmichael, Ian S. E., Turner, Francis J., and Verhoogen, John; (1974) ''Igneous Petrology'', McGraw-Hill, pp. 406 - 426.
★ Metrich, Nicole, Françoise Pineau and Marc Javoy, 1988, ''Volatiles : Mantle Source Characterization and Degassing Process for Hot Spot Volcanism - The Piton de la Fournaise (Reunion Island) Example'', http://www.the-conference.com/JConfAbs/1/88.html Retrieved
18 February 2006.
★ Kerr, A. C. (1997) ''What is the difference between a komatiite and a picrite?'' http://www.le.ac.uk/geology/ack2/komatiite/difference.html retrieved
22 August 2005.
★ Le Maitre, L.E., ed., (2002) ''Igneous Rocks: A Classification and Glossary of Terms'' 2nd edition, Cambridge.
★ Rhodes, J. M., (1995) ''The 1852 and 1868 Mauna Loa Picrite Eruptions'' Geophysical Monograph Series, vol. 92, AGU,
Abstract retrieved
18 February 2006.
★ Wilkenson, J.F.G., and Hensel, H. D., 1988, ''The petrology of some picrites from Mauna Loa and Kilauea volcanoes, Hawaii'': Contrib. Mineralogy and Petrology, v. 98, pp. 326-345.
★ Williams, Howel, Francis J. Turner, and Charles M. Gilbert, 1954, ''Petrography'' W. H. Freeman, pp. 40 - 41.