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rhyolite

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
rhyolite, fine-grained light-colored acidic volcanic rock rock, aggregation of solid matter composed of one or more of the minerals forming the earth's crust. The scientific study of rocks is called petrology. Rocks are commonly divided, according to their origin, into three major classes—igneous, sedimentary, and
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. Rhyolite is chemically the equivalent of granite, and is thus composed primarily of quartz and orthoclase feldspar with subordinate amounts of plagioclase feldspar, biotite mica, amphiboles, and pyroxenes. Rhyolite lava exhibits a typical banded structure produced by its flow pattern. Rhyolite lavas occur in continental and submarine volcanoes, especially island arcs, and in igneous dikes. Rhyolite lavas are typically highly viscous and are explosively ejected from volcanoes. Rhyolites were formed in profusion in the Yellowstone Park area and throughout the southwestern portion of the United States.

rhyolite

Igneous rock that is the volcanic equivalent of granite, whose chemical composition is similar. Rhyolites are known from all parts of the Earth and from all geologic ages; they are found mostly on the continents or their immediate margins, but small quantities have been described from remote islands.


rhyolite [′rīยทə‚līt]
(petrology)
A light-colored, aphanitic volcanic rock composed largely of alkali feldspar and free silica with minor amounts of mafic minerals; the extrusive equivalent of granite.


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Siebert's well-cadenced couplets trace the history of Rhyolite from the discovery of gold ore in 1904 through its brief heyday as a boomtown, with piped-in water, three newspapers, saloons, a school, and an opera house.
The target is a low-sulphidation epithermal style gold deposit hosted by rhyolite, similar to the Grew Creek property 60 kilmeters to the west.
Like the other holes drilled so far, virtually all of the mineralization is hosted in rhyolite.
 
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