Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Properties of Minerals
Advertisements

N. Lindsley-Griffin, 1999 Quartz Even when the crystals are different sizes, angles between equivalent faces are the same For different minerals, angles.
Identifying Minerals Pages Identifying MineralsCrystal SystemsCleavageCleavage/FractureFractureSpecial PropertiesDensityHardnessColorStreakLuster.
FIRST LESSON IN GEOLOGY Minerals and Mineral Identification.
What are minerals? How are minerals identified? Pyrite or “Fool’s Gold” Gold.
Minerals Properties of Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and definite chemical.
(How can we identify which mineral is which?)
Review 1. What are the two mineral groups?1. What are the two mineral groups? 2. What does chemical composition mean?2. What does chemical composition.
Properties of Minerals
Minerals. What is a mineral? 5 Characteristics of a mineral Naturally Occurring Naturally Occurring Inorganic (Not Living) Inorganic (Not Living) Always.
Mineral Identification. What you’ll need to remember Describe physical properties used to identify minerals. Identify minerals using physical properties.
2.1 Notes Properties of Minerals
Identifying Minerals Every mineral has certain identifying characteristics 1.Color 2.Streak 3.Luster 4.Density 5.Hardness 6.Crystal Systems 7.Cleavage.
Minerals 1. Natural 2. Solid 3. Inorganic 4
Unit 3 Lesson 1 Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Minerals A mineral: occurs naturally Is inorganic Is solid
Minerals. What is a mineral? Solid (hard) Natural (not man made) Inorganic (not living) Crystal structure (repeating pattern) Definite composition (made.
Minerals, Rocks, and Mineral Resources
Minerals. A mineral is an element or compound found in the earth. The 5 basic features all minerals have 1.They are solid 2.They are formed naturally.
Properties of Minerals. What is a mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. More.
How to Identify Minerals By: (write your name) Draw a picture here.
2.1 Guided Reading. C. Solid D. Crystal Structure E. Definite chemical composition B. Streak C. Luster E. Hardness F. Crystal systems G. Cleavage & fracture.
Sometimes you need more information than just color and appearance to identify most minerals.
Rocks & Minerals.
Aim: How do we identify minerals?
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is inorganic. Minerals are naturally occurring. Minerals are solids. Minerals have a crystal structure. Minerals.
 Naturally occuring  Solid  Formed by inorganic processes  Have a crystal structure  Definite chemical composition  To be a mineral – MUST HAVE.
Identifying Minerals Inside Earth Chapter 4.1 Pages
ALL ABOUT THE PROPERTIES OF MINERALS How Are Minerals Identified?
Minerals. There are about 3,000 known minerals, only about 30 are common. The most common are quartz, feldspar, mica, and calcite.
Physical Properties Of Minerals
Properties of Minerals What is a mineral?. The Rules of the Mineral Every Mineral must follow these set of rules 1. Naturally Occurring 2. Inorganic 3.
Minerals Mineral Mineral Formation A naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. – Naturally formed – not made by people.
Minerals and Mineral Properties
Minerals and Mineral Identification
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
Minerals.
Earth Science 1/4 20 Minerals – building block of rocks 4 components
Properties of Minerals Students should write notes in yellow
How could you tell these minerals apart to determine which is which?
Unit 3 Lesson 2 What Are Minerals?
Mineral Review Chapter 13.
Minerals.
Chapter 7 what Are Minerals?
Minerals of Earth’s Crust
Chapter 7 Rocks and Minerals
Minerals.
Minerals Jeopardy Final Jeopardy Properties I Properties II
The Wild, Wacky World of Minerals
MINERALS Reese.
Chapter 2.1 What Are Minerals?
Minerals.
Mineral Properties.
Chapter 3 Minerals Updated November 2011.
Chapter 3 Section 1: Properties of minerals
Identifying Minerals Each mineral has its own specific properties that can be used to identify it, this is due to the fact that each mineral has its own.
How are Minerals Identified?
Mineral Identification
Identifying Minerals Properties: Color, Luster, Streak, Density, Hardness, Cleavage, Fracture, and Special Properties.
Mineral Identification
EQ: What are the properties of a mineral?
Lesson 1 Minerals.
Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals?
Unit 2 Rocks and Minerals
What is a mineral? What is a mineral?
Minerals and Rocks Chapter 8.
Mineral Identification Vocabulary
Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals?
Minerals.
Mineral Classification
Presentation transcript:

Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? A mineral is any nonliving solid that has a crystal form. All minerals form in nature. There are more than 4,700 different kinds of minerals found on Earth. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Circle the picture that is most likely to be a mineral: Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Classwork 1 Question: 1 Circle the picture that is most likely to be a mineral: Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

What Are Minerals? Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Mineral crystals come in different shapes, but all particles in a crystal combine to form a shape that is repeated. The repeating structure of the particles forms the mineral crystal. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

What Are Minerals? Question: 2 Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Which mineral is which? Different physical properties can help you identify minerals? Hardness is one property used to identify minerals. Hardness is the ability of one mineral to scratch another mineral. The Moh’s scale is used to describe the hardness of a mineral. The softest minerals score 1 and the hardest minerals score 10. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Which Mineral Is Which? Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Which Mineral Is Which? Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Question: 1 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Which Mineral Is Which? Luster :is another property used to identify minerals. It describes how minerals reflect light. The minerals copper, gold, and silver have a metallic luster. Talc and gypsum have an earthy luster. Some minerals have a glassy luster. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Which Mineral Is Which? Question: 3 Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unique Properties of Minerals Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Unique Properties of Minerals The way a mineral breaks can also be used to identify it. When minerals break, the broken sides are smooth and straight(1 ,2,3 or 4 surfaces). Minerals that break this way have cleavage. Minerals that do not break along smooth lines have fracture. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unique Properties of Minerals Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Unique Properties of Minerals The color of a mineral’s streak can also be used to identify it. Streak is the color of a mineral when it is rubbed against a white tile. A streak can be the same color as the mineral itself. This is not true for many minerals. Pyrite has a gold color, but its streak is greenish-black. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unique Properties of Minerals Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Unique Properties of Minerals A mineral can come in different colors, such as corundum crystals. However the streaks of these crystals are always white. Some minerals have other properties that can be used to identify them. For example, calcite and fluorite glow under a black light. Calcite fizzes when you drop vinegar on it. Quartz conducts electricity. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

Unique Properties of Minerals Unit 9 Lesson 1 What Are Minerals? Unique Properties of Minerals Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company