Dictionary Definition
batholith n : large mass of intrusive igneous
rock believed to have solidified deep within the earth [syn:
batholite, pluton, plutonic
rock]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
A batholith (from Greek bathos, depth + lithos,
rock) is a large emplacement of igneous intrusive
(also called plutonic) rock that forms from cooled magma deep in the Earth's crust.
Batholiths are almost always made mostly of felsic or intermediate
rock-types, such as granite, quartz
monzonite, or diorite (see also granite
dome).
Although they may appear uniform, batholiths are
in fact structures with complex histories and compositions. They
are composed of multiple masses, or plutons, bodies of igneous rock
of irregular dimensions (typically at least several kilometers)
that can be distinguished from adjacent igneous rock by some
combination of criteria including age, composition, texture, or
mappable structures. Individual plutons are crystallized from magma
that traveled toward the surface from a zone of partial melting
near the base of the Earth's crust.
Traditionally, these plutons have been considered
to form by ascent of relatively buoyant magma in
large masses called plutonic diapirs. Because the diapirs are
liquefied and very hot, they tend to rise through the surrounding
country
rock, pushing it aside and partially melting it. Most diapirs
do not reach the surface to form volcanoes, but instead slow
down, cool and usually solidify 5 to 30 kilometers underground as
plutons (hence the use of the word pluton; in reference to the
Roman god of
the underworld Pluto). It
has also been proposed that plutons commonly are formed not by
diapiric ascent of large magma diapirs, but rather by aggregation
of smaller volumes of magma that ascended as dikes.
A batholith is formed when many plutons converge
together to form a huge expanse of granitic rock. Some batholiths
are mammoth, paralleling past and present subduction zones
and other heat sources for hundreds of kilometers in continental
crust. One such batholith is the Sierra
Nevada Batholith, which is a continuous granitic formation that
forms much of the Sierra
Nevada in California. An
even larger batholith, found predominantly in the Coast
Mountains of western Canada, extends for
1,800 kilometers and reaches into southeastern Alaska, which is
called the Coast
Plutonic Complex.
There is also an important geographic usage of
the term batholith. For a geographer, a batholith is an exposed
area of mostly continuous plutonic rock that covers an area larger
than 100 square kilometers. Areas smaller than 100 kilometers are
called stocks. However, the majority of batholiths visible at the
surface (via outcroppings) have areas far greater than 100 square
kilometers. These areas are exposed to the surface through the
process of erosion
accelerated by continental uplift
acting over many tens of millions to hundreds of millions of years.
This process has removed several tens of kilometers of overlying
rock in many areas, exposing the once deeply buried
batholiths.
Batholiths exposed at the surface are also
subjected to huge pressure differences between their former homes
deep in the earth and their new homes at or near the surface. As a
result, their crystal
structure expands slightly and over time. This manifests itself
by a form of mass wasting
called exfoliation.
This form of erosion causes convex and relatively thin sheets of
rock to slough off the exposed surfaces of batholiths (a process
accelerated by frost
wedging). The result is fairly clean and rounded rock faces. A
well-known example of the result of this process is Half Dome,
which located in Yosemite
Valley.
See also
References
- Plummer, McGeary, Carlson, Physical Geology, Eight Edition (McGraw-Hill: Boston, 1999) pages 61-63 ISBN 0-697-37404-1
- Glazner, Bartley, Coleman, Gray, Taylor, Are plutons assembled over millions of years by amalgamation from small magma chambers?, GSA Today: Vol. 14, No. 4, pp. 4–11
External links
batholith in German: Batholith
batholith in Spanish: Batolito
batholith in Estonian: Batoliit
batholith in French: Batholite
batholith in Italian: Batolite
batholith in Hebrew: בתולית
batholith in Mongolian: Батолит
batholith in Dutch: Batholiet
batholith in Japanese: バソリス
batholith in Polish: Batolit
batholith in Russian: Батолит
batholith in Ukrainian:
Батоліти