Basalt
A typical dark and dense rock with a fine texture is the igneous rock, basalt.
basalt
basalt
Basalt.
Basalt !! :)
Oceanic crust.
Oceanic crust:As the name already suggests, this crust is below the oceans. There, the crust is 4-7 miles (6-11 km) thick. The rocks of the oceanic crust are very young compared with the rocks of the continental crust. The rocks of the oceanic crust are not older than 200 million years. The material of which the oceanic crust consists is for the greater part tholeiitic basalt (this is basalt without olivine). Basalt has a dark, fine and gritty volcanic structure. It is formed out of very liquid lava, which cools off quickly. The grains are so small that they are only visible under a microscope. The average density of the oceanic crust is 3g/cm³.
because organisms such as earthworms can live in a dark-colored and loose soil..
Light-coloured igneous rocks, such as granite, have a higher silica content and lower iron and magnesium than darker ones, such as basalt. Since iron and magnesium are very dense minerals, this makes darker igneous rocks more dense than lighter ones.
Basalt !! :)
dark colored and igneous
Basalt.
The rocks that makes up the oceanic crusts, are very dark, relatively thin and highly dense.
The rocks that makes up the oceanic crusts, are very dark, relatively thin and highly dense.
Yes, the name of it is Basalt.
Oceanic crust.
The crust is divided into two types: oceanic crust and continental crust. Oceanic crust, found under the ocean floor, is made of dense rocks such as basalt. It is about 7 kilometers (4 miles) thick. Continental crust, found under land masses, is made of less dense rocks such as granite.
underlies the ocean floor
The oceanic crust is made out of basalts - (lava-hardened Iron/Magnesium Silicate mixtures which solidified rapidly).
Light colored
Oceanic crust:As the name already suggests, this crust is below the oceans. There, the crust is 4-7 miles (6-11 km) thick. The rocks of the oceanic crust are very young compared with the rocks of the continental crust. The rocks of the oceanic crust are not older than 200 million years. The material of which the oceanic crust consists is for the greater part tholeiitic basalt (this is basalt without olivine). Basalt has a dark, fine and gritty volcanic structure. It is formed out of very liquid lava, which cools off quickly. The grains are so small that they are only visible under a microscope. The average density of the oceanic crust is 3g/cm³.