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plutons

Plutons are bodies of intrusive igneous rock that crystallized from magma cooling underground within the crust. They form when magma pools and solidifies beneath the surface, either from a single large intrusion or from repeated injections of magma. Over geological time, uplift and erosion may remove surrounding rock, exposing these intrusions at the surface or as large bedrock outcrops.

Most plutonic rocks are coarse-grained because cooling occurs slowly underground. They are commonly felsic to intermediate

Geologists classify plutons by size and shape. Batholiths are large bodies covering more than about 100 square

Notable examples of plutons include the Sierra Nevada batholith in western North America, the Coast Plutonic

in
composition,
including
granite,
granodiorite,
tonalite,
diorite,
and
monzonite.
Some
plutons
exhibit
a
porphyritic
texture,
with
large
phenocrysts
surrounded
by
a
finer-grained
groundmass,
reflecting
changes
in
cooling
rate
within
the
intrusion.
Mineralogy
typically
features
quartz,
plagioclase
and
alkali
feldspar,
along
with
micas,
amphibole,
and
other
accessories.
kilometers;
smaller
stocks
are
less
than
this
threshold.
In
addition,
tabular
intrusions
include
sills,
which
run
parallel
to
surrounding
layers,
and
dikes,
which
cut
across
them.
Laccoliths
are
lens-shaped
intrusions
that
dome
the
overlying
strata.
Complex
in
western
Canada,
and
the
exposed
granitic
rocks
of
the
Adirondack
Mountains
in
New
York.
Plutons
record
episodes
of
crustal
magmatism
and
are
important
for
understanding
crustal
differentiation,
tectonics,
and
the
creation
of
ore
deposits.