- Fiamme
Fiamme are lens-shapes, usually mm to cm in size, seen on surfaces of some
volcaniclastic rocks. They can occur in welded pyroclastic fall deposits and inignimbrite s, which are the deposits ofpumice ous pyroclastic density currents. The name "fiamme" comes from the Italian word for "flames", describing their shape. The term is descriptive and non-genetic.Fiamme are most typical of welded
lapilli -tuff s and are commonly found in association witheutaxitic textures, best seen under the microscope.Some fiamme represent fragments ofvolcanic ejecta, often pumice lapilli that have been flattened by compaction and/or shear. Some fiamme are formed from flattened hot, relatively lowviscosity , highporosity fragments ofvolcanic glass orpumice . But this is not the only way they can form: they can also form when pumice lapilli are altered to clay and compact duringdiagenesis ; and fiamme are also widely reported in viscous lavas (andesite s torhyolite s) where they form by shear-induced autobrecciation of pumiceous orobsidian zones, followed by shear and annealing of the fragments. Fiamme can also result from patchy alteration and recrystalisation of volcanic rocks, or by patchyrevesiculation ofwelded tuff matrix (especially in rheomorphicperalkaline tuffs).ee also
*
Tuff andvolcanic rock
*Agglomerate andignimbrite
*List of rock textures
*Rock microstructure External links
* [http://www.brookes.ac.uk/geology/sedstruc/fiamme/home.htm Example image and explanation of fiamme structures]
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