Rocks and the Rock Cycle
All rocks belong to one of three great families — igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic — that are continually transformed into one another through the rock cycle driven by Earth's internal heat and surface processes.
Definition
The rock cycle is the set of processes by which rocks of any of the three classes — igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic — are continually transformed into one another through melting, weathering, deposition, burial, and metamorphism.
Scope
This area introduces the three rock classes from a general-geology perspective and the rock cycle that links them. It treats how each class forms and how rocks are recycled, providing field-level identification and process context; detailed petrologic classification and mineralogy belong to the mineralogy-and-petrology subfield.
Sub-topics
Core questions
- How are igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rocks distinguished?
- What processes convert one rock class into another?
- How does the rock cycle connect Earth's interior to its surface?
Key theories
- The rock cycle
- Rocks are continuously created, destroyed, and reformed: igneous rocks crystallize from melt, are weathered into sediment that lithifies into sedimentary rock, which can be metamorphosed and ultimately melted again, closing the cycle.
- Uniformitarianism and deep time
- Hutton argued that the same slow processes observed today have operated throughout Earth's history, and that the cyclic destruction and renewal of rock implies an immense span of geologic time with 'no vestige of a beginning.'
Mechanisms
Internal heat drives melting that produces igneous rock and metamorphism that recrystallizes existing rock in the solid state, while surface processes weather and erode rock into sediment that is buried and lithified into sedimentary rock. Plate tectonics moves material between these settings — uplifting deep rocks to the surface and burying surface rocks at depth — so the three classes are perpetually converted into one another.
Clinical relevance
Recognizing rock type and its place in the rock cycle is the starting point for evaluating construction stone, aggregate, ore, fossil-fuel, and aquifer potential, and for interpreting the geological history of any region.
History
James Hutton's late-eighteenth-century theory of the Earth introduced the cyclic view of rock formation and the concept of deep time, later popularized by Charles Lyell as uniformitarianism. The modern rock cycle synthesizes these insights with twentieth-century petrology and plate tectonics.
Key figures
- James Hutton
- Charles Lyell
- Robert Siever
Related topics
Seminal works
- hutton1788
- marshak2019
Frequently asked questions
- What are the three main types of rock?
- The three main types are igneous rock, which crystallizes from molten material; sedimentary rock, which forms from compacted and cemented sediment; and metamorphic rock, which forms when existing rock is altered by heat and pressure.