Quartz is milky white feldspar is white potassium feldspar is pink biotite is black or brown muscovite is yellow and amphibole is green.
The colors of granite depend on the mineral grain size.
Peridotite basalt gabbro diorite rhyolite.
For example a granite consists of lots of quartz and feldspar and is generally light colored.
Not a problem for rapid cooling of plutons.
The black grains can be biotite or hornblende.
Grain size can vary greatly from extremely coarse grained rocks with crystals the size of your fist down to glassy material which cooled so quickly that there are no mineral grains at all.
Numerous other minerals can be present in granite.
One objection to the earth being only 6 000 years old as described in the bible is the claim that the coarse grained texture of granites shows they cooled slowly over millions of years.
Coarse grain varieties with mineral grains large enough to see without a magnifying glass are called phaneritic.
But a rapidly cooled volcanic rock with the same composition as the granite could be entirely.
The difference is grain size and cooling rate during the rock formation process.
The most common colors of granite are white pink yellow grey and black primarily because of its composition.
Of course diorite and andesite have the same mineral content and occur in the same areas.
Under certain conditions the mineral grains can grow very large.
The pink grains are orthoclase feldspar and the clear to smoky grains are quartz or muscovite.
Granite and gabbro are examples of.
Ferromagnesium minerals are dark colored.
Slow cooling of diorite results into coarse grain size due to large crystals formation with more ion transport.
The classification of igneous rocks depends on both grain size and silica composition.
The grain size is coarse enough to allow recognition of the major minerals.
Using your knowledge of this information for the igneous rocks listed place the rock.
But color can be misleading when applied to rocks of the same composition but different grain size.
The minerals found in granite are typically light colored and may vary depending on which minerals are prevalent.
It is about two inches across.
On the other hand if the molten rock is abundant in quartz and minerals that make.
The overall color of granite depends largely on the kind of feldspar in the.
The specimen above is a typical granite.