Extrusive
Extrusive refers to igneous rocks formed from magma that erupts onto the Earth's surface or intrudes only briefly before cooling. Rapid cooling at or near the surface produces fine-grained textures, where individual crystals are often too small to see (aphanitic). If cooling is extremely fast, the rock may become glassy, as in obsidian. Many eruptions also yield vesicular rocks, such as pumice and scoria, where gas bubbles are preserved as pores.
Extrusive rocks originate from several surface processes, including lava flows that spread across the landscape, lava
Textures in extrusive rocks reflect cooling history. Some rocks are porphyritic, containing larger phenocrysts crystallized during
Studying extrusive rocks helps geologists infer past volcanic activity, magma evolution, and plate tectonic processes, including