Granite
(pronounced /rænt/) is a common and widely occurring type of intrusive, felsic,
igneous rock. Granites usually have a medium to coarse grained
texture. Occasionally some individual crystals (phenocrysts) are larger than
the groundmass in which case the texture is known as porphyritic. A granitic
rock with a porphyritic texture is sometimes known as a porphyry. Granites can
be pink to grey in color, depending on their chemistry and mineralogy.
By definition, granite has a color index
(i.e. the percentage of the rock made up of dark minerals) of less than 25%.
Outcrops of granite tend to form tors, and rounded massifs. Granites sometimes
occur in circular depressions surrounded by a range of hills, formed by the
metamorphic aureole or hornfels. Granite is nearly always massive
(lacking internal structures), hard and tough, and therefore it has gained
widespread use as a construction stone. The average density of granite is
located between 2.65[1] and 2.75 g/cm3, it's compressive strength usually lies
above 200 GPa and its viscosity at standard temperature and pressure is ~4.5 •
1019 Pas.[2] The word comes from the Latin granum, a
grain, in reference to the coarse-grained structure of such a crystalline rock.
Granitoid is used as a descriptive field
term for general, light colored, coarse-grained igneous rocks for which a more
specific name requires petrographic examination.[3]
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