karkeakiteisiä
Karkeakiteisiä is a term used in Finnish geology to describe rocks or mineral aggregates that display a coarse-grained crystalline texture in which individual crystals are readily visible to the unaided eye. The word combines karkea "coarse" and kide "crystal," with the adjectival suffix -inen and the plural suffix -isiä, and it is primarily used to characterize the texture of igneous and metamorphic rocks in field and lab notes.
Definition: A karkeakiteinen texture typically refers to grains larger than about 0.5 millimeters, commonly ranging from
Formation and occurrence: The texture results from slow cooling of silica-rich magmas in plutonic settings (granitoids,
Physical properties: Rocks with this texture typically show well-formed crystals, a low to moderate porosity, and
Significance: The presence of a karkeakiteisiä texture helps geologists distinguish between slow-cooling plutonic assemblages and other
See also: coarse-grained texture, pegmatite, granitoid, granulite.