InstaScience at Elemental Blogging

Your home for digital nature study resources and teaching science at home tips!

A Gift from Elemental Science

Living Books for Science Sign up below to receive weekly tips & tools for homeschool science and we'll send you a FREE copy of Living Books for Science: A Step by Step Guide!
  • Home
  • About
    • Speaking
  • InstaScience
  • Homeschool
    • Experiments
    • Science Fair
    • Teaching Tips
  • Printables
  • My Books
  • Elemental Science
  • Contact
You are here: Home / earth science / Scoria {InstaScience}

Scoria {InstaScience}

January 11, 2016 by Paige Hudson

Scoria is an igneous rock formed by extrusion, very similar to pumice and basalt. Learn how this type of rocks forms and see how it differs from pumice.

A few years back, we took a very long road trip out to Arizona to see the Grand Canyon. It was spectacular and I still can’t really put into words how amazing it is to see this canyon in person. But a surprising highlight of our trip out there was a last minute addition, Sunset Crater National Monument.

We were giddy at the chance to see a cinder cone volcano up close. Not only did we had the chance to see lava tubes and lava flows, but we got the chance to study several types of igneous rocks. It was simply beautiful. One of the rocks we found was scoria, a.k.a., lava rock or rather those red landscaping rocks you see in the garden department.

Scoria is an igneous rock formed by extrusion. These rocks are black when the first form, but over time they can take on a brownish or reddish hue as the iron present in the rock oxidizes. Scoria rock is blown out of the top of a cinder volcano as it explodes. It cools relatively quick, which leads to nooks and crannies all throughout the rock.

Underground molten rock has a good bit of dissolved gas in it. Once it reaches the surface, the dissolved gas present in the molten rock bubbles up and escapes as the lava cools. If the lava cools before all of the gas has escaped, the bubbles are trapped and igneous rocks like scoria and pumice are formed.

Scoria differs from pumice in a few ways. Pumice is much lighter in color, its normally light grey or tan. Pumice rock has a higher concentration of trapped bubbles, which means that it is much lighter than scoria. Because of this, scoria won’t float in water the way pumice can. Despite their differences, scoria and pumice are both known as basaltic rocks due to their similarities with basalt in chemical make-up.

Fun Fact – The Wupatki people use scoria rock when building their homes.

Teaching Science At Home

Want to learn more about igneous rocks? Check out the following articles:

  • Scoria: Igneous Rock – Read more about scoria and its importance from Geology.com.
  • Igneous Rocks {Video} – Learn how rocks are formed in this video from Make Me a Genius.
  • Learn more about another igneous rock, basalt.

Related Homeschool Science Activities

Keep the learning going with these science activities!

  • Socria Observation – Get a bit of lava rock from your local store to add to your rock collection. Have the students observe how the rock feels and how it looks. You can use a magnifying glass or a palm-sized microscope to look a bit closer.
  • Volcanic Eruption – These activity uses an empty yogurt container, dirt, and toothpaste to show how magma erupts from the surface of the earth.
  • Igneous Rock Nature Study from the Handbook of Nature Study blog.

Filed Under: earth science, instascience, nature study Tagged With: fall, instascience, rocks, spring, summer, winter

Welcome to the Elemental Blogging Laboratory

 
profile picWelcome to the Elemental Blogging Laboratory, a.k.a. the Eb Lab. Here at the lab, I have the pleasure of sharing with you all my passion for mixing up solutions for homeschool science! My name is Paige Hudson. I am a homeschooling mom and science curriculum writer for Elemental Science.
 
Why do I call this blog the "Eb Lab"? It is because I am scientist at heart and by profession, so it pretty much spills into everything I do. I love to share tips and tools with fellow educators as they seek to share science with their students!
 
That is what this blog is all about. One homeschooler to another, sharing her area of expertise, seeking to support you as you teach your students about the wonders of science.
 
So, grab your lab coat, notebook, and goggles...well maybe not the goggles because let's face it nobody looks good in those...and you probably don't have a lab coat lying around your house either...
 
So, grab a cup of coffee and notebook, and head on in to the Eb Lab to gather tools for homeschool science, tips for homeschooling, and the latest Elemental Science news!
 
Enter the Eb Lab

SIS advert

SIS advert blog

Volume 3 advert

Sassafras v3 ad

Copyright © 2025 · Prose on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in