Structure and Formation of Minerals 4.2 Mineral Formation Structure and Formation of Minerals
Learning Targets: Describe how melted rock produces minerals Describe how hot rock produces different minerals Explain how minerals form from solutions
Mineral Formation Minerals form by: Formation from Hot Material Formation from Solutions Formation from Hot Underground Water
Formation from Hot Material Magma is molten rock Molten = melted Underground Magma Above ground Lava Most magma never becomes lava, it cools underground
Magma cooling underground
Cooling of Magma When magma cools, it solidifies Cool Solidify Crystallize Rocks: mixture of minerals Magma can solidify in seconds or over millions of years Crystal is a pure mineral
Cooling of Magma Quick cooling = small crystals Atoms do not have time to arrange themselves Slow cooling = large crystals Atoms arrange and rearrange themselves until they are in the most stable positions
Small minerals Feldspar in the cracks
Large minerals Large feldspar
Very large minerals
Cooling of Magma Magma cools slowly; lava cools quickly Lava traps more gas as it cools Sometimes lava cools so quickly no crystalline structure can develop
Formations from Solutions Water in nature always contains some amount of minerals it is a solution Hot water holds more minerals Minerals can precipitate out of solution Precipitate: water evaporates but minerals are left behind Salts are most common
Halite: Rock Salt
Minerals from Hot Underground Water Water deep below the surface can be very hot Hot water = more minerals As water moves up through cracks in rocks Water cools minerals are deposited Hot water = minerals dissolve Cold water = minerals precipitate
Mineral Rich Water When water deposits minerals into cracks in existing rock, veins are formed
Quartz Vein
Gold bearing vein in brown
Vein with a fault