AardvarkBusiness.net - Business Search Engine AardvarkBusiness.net - Business Search Engine


Home > Geology

Pumice
by Wikipedia of Wikipedia.org
 
Wikipedia is a free content encyclopedia written collaboratively by contributors from around the world.
Click here to see other articles by Wikipedia
 
Pumice is a light, porous type of pyroclastic igneous rock. It is formed during explosive volcanic eruptions when liquid lava is ejected into the air as a froth containing masses of gas bubbles. As the lava solidifies, the bubbles are frozen into the rock.
 
 
Pumice is a light, porous type of pyroclastic igneous rock. It is formed during explosive volcanic eruptions when liquid lava is ejected into the air as a froth containing masses of gas bubbles. As the lava solidifies, the bubbles are frozen into the rock. Any type of igneous rock — andesite, basalt, dacite or rhyolite — can form pumice given suitable eruptive conditions. When larger amounts of gas are present, the result is a finer-grained variety of pumice known as pumicite.

It is considered a glass because it has no crystal structure. Pumice varies in density according to the thickness of the solid material between the bubbles; many samples float in water. It is widely used to make lightweight concrete and as an abrasive, especially in polishes and cosmetic exfoliants.

When used as an additive for cement, fine-grained version of pumice called pozzolan is mixed with lime to form a light-weight, smooth, plaster-like concrete. This form of concrete was used as far back as Roman times.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pumice".
 
Email this article to a friend
HTML code (to link to this article from your Website)
BBCode (to link to this article in a forum post)

   

Latest Articles

° George W. Bush
° Bill Clinton
° George H. W. Bush
° Ronald Reagan
° Jimmy Carter
° Gerald Ford
° Richard Nixon
° Lyndon B. Johnson
° John F. Kennedy
° Dwight D. Eisenhower

Aardvark Articles Search Engine - Aardvark Articles Directory - Aardvark Articles Forum - Add Your Articles
Make Aardvark Articles your homepage - Bookmark Aardvark Articles - Link to Aardvark Articles
Monitor your traffic with Aardvark Tracking


[Valid RSS]

Contact Aaron the Aardvark


© Website design by The Dedicated Partnership All rights reserved.