Diapirs commonly intrude buoyantly upward along fractures or zones of structural weakness through denser overlying rocks. This process is known as
diapirism. The resulting structures are also referred to as
piercement structures. In the process, segments of the existing
strata can be disconnected and pushed upwards. While moving higher, they retain many of their original properties, e.g. pressure; their pressure can be significantly different from the pressure of the shallower strata they get pushed into. Such overpressured "floaters" pose a significant risk when trying to
drill through them. There is an analogy to a
Galilean thermometer.{{cite book |title=Plates, plumes, and planetary processes;
Volume 430 of Special Papers |chapter=The eclogite engine: Chemical geodynamics as a Galileo thermometer |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l9a7tIJBYbkC&pg=PA47 Rock types such as
evaporitic salt deposits, and gas charged muds are potential sources of diapirs. Diapirs also form in the
Earth's mantle when a sufficient mass of hot, less dense
magma assembles. Diapirism in the mantle is thought to be associated with the development of
large igneous provinces and some
mantle plumes. Explosive, hot
volatile rich magma or volcanic eruptions are referred to generally as
diatremes. Diatremes are not usually associated with diapirs, as they are small-volume magmas which ascend by volatile plumes, not by density contrast with the surrounding mantle. ==Economic importance==