Basalt is an extrusive igneous rock, sometimes porphyritic, and is often both fine-grained and dense. Basalt in the tops of subaerial lava flows and cinders will often be highly vesiculated, imparting a lightweight "frothy" texture to the rock. The term basalt is often casually applied to shallow intrusive rocks with a composition typical of basalt, but rocks of this composition with a phaneritic groundmass should generally be referred to as gabbro. The crustal portions of oceanic tectonic plates are predominantly made of basalt.
Unweathered basalt is frequently black to greenish_black in color, characterized by a preponderance of calcic plagioclasefeldspars and pyroxene together with minor amounts of accessory minerals such as olivine. Basaltic cinders are often red. Glass may be present, particularly as rinds on rapidly chilled surfaces of lava flows, and is commonly (but not exclusively) associated with underwater eruptions. Amygdaloidal structure is common in relic vesicles and beautifully crystallized species of zeolites, quartz or calcite are frequently found.
Columnar basalt at Sheepeater Cliff in Yellowstone
The lava flows of the Deccan Traps in India, the Columbia River Plateau of Washington and Oregon states in the United States, as well as the Triassic lavas of eastern North America are basalts. Perhaps the most famous basalt flow in the world is the Giant's Causeway on the northern coast of Ireland, in which the vertical joints form hexagonal columns and give the impression of having been artificially constructed. The dark areas visible on Earth's moon, the lunar mares, are plains of basalt, and basalt Moon samples were brought to Earth by the astronauts of the Apollo program. Pliny used the word basalt and it is said to have had an Ethiopian origin, meaning a black stone.
Olivine and augite are the commonest porphyriticminerals in basalts, the former green or yellowish (and weathering to green or brown serpentine), the latter pitch-fl.
Basalticlavas are frequently spongy or pumiceous, especially near their surfaces; and, in course of time, the steam cavities become filled with secondary minerals such as calcite, chlorite and zeolites.
In the vitreous basalts sometimes very few crystallizedminerals are observable; the greater part of the rock is a dark brown glassy material, almost opaque even in the thinnest sections, and generally charged with fl grains of magnetite, skeleton crystals of augite or felspar, spherulites, perlitic cracks, cmsteam vesicles.