Intrusive Igneous Rocks

Home Igneous Rocks Intrusive Igneous Rocks
Intrusive igneous rocks form deep beneath the Earth’s surface where magma cools slowly, surrounded and insulated by the surrounding crust, allowing large mineral crystals to grow and create coarse-grained textures that you can clearly see with the naked eye. These rocks—whether granite, diorite, gabbro or other plutonic varieties—capture a story of deep geological time: how magma migrated, paused in the crust, cooled gradually and solidified into massive bodies that later might be exposed by uplift and erosion. From a geological standpoint, they tell us about the thermal history, composition of the magma, and the tectonic environment in which they solidified. For engineers and site professionals, intrusive igneous rocks matter a lot: their mineral size, strength, fracturing and weathering behaviour each influence how a rock mass will handle excavation, tunnelling, drilling or foundation work. In this category you’ll explore how these rocks form, how to recognise key types in the field or core, how their textures and structures reflect their deep origin, and why when you’re assessing a rocky site, discovering coarse-grained plutonic rock means you’re dealing with something tough—but also something that requires careful handling of fractures, cooling joints and weathering zones.

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