Jump to content

Petrographic province

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A petrographic province is a geological region within which the igneous rocks reveal a relationship (so-called consanguinity) in chemical composition, which may be referred to a community of origin. This relationship may be chemically a close one, but the rocks have widely varying mineralogical composition, or the kinship may be restricted to one or more of the chemical components in the rocks.

Etymology

[edit]

Petrography derives from petra (Greek: πέτρα), meaning 'rock', and graphein (Greek: γράφειν), 'to write'.

References

[edit]
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Petrographic Province" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.