Instructions
Note the rock's color. Basalt appears black or grayish-black, sometimes with a greenish or reddish crust.
Feel its texture. Basalt consists of a fine and even-grain. The dense rock has no crystals or minerals discernible to the naked eye. When freshly broken, basalt has a dull surface.
Determine its structure with your naked eye or a microscope. Often vesicular or amygdaloidal, basalt has columnar jointing.
Examine your rock's composition with a microscope. Basalt occurs more often as pyroxene (shiny, black) and as plagioclase (tabular, white-gray). The presence of olivine gives basalt a green, glassy appearance and is called olivine basalt. Also present may be iron ore (ilmenite and/or magnetite) or bronze-colored biottie.