Minerals. A Mineral is… Naturally Occurring – made by nature – not by man.

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Presentation transcript:

Minerals

A Mineral is… Naturally Occurring – made by nature – not by man

A Mineral is… Inorganic - not alive, never was alive, not made from a living process

A Mineral is… Solid – not a liquid or a gas

A Mineral is… Unique Chemical Composition – every mineral is different

A Mineral is… Crystalline Structure – atoms repeat in patterns

Crystal Shapes

Basics of Crystals Crystals are defined by the number of sides (faces) and the angles of these sides (geometry)

1. Cubic cubic – all sides are square

2. Tetragonal tetragonal – 4 rectangles, 2 squares

3. Orthorhombic orthorhombic – all rectangles, 3 different sized rectangles

4. Monoclinic monoclinic – 4 rectangles, 2 parallelograms

5. Triclinic triclinic – all parallelograms

6. Hexagonal hexagonal - six-sided prisms. When you look at the crystal on-end, the cross section is a hexagon

Mineral Groups Minerals are often grouped together by their composition (what they are made of) There are over 4,000 known minerals and only 7 groups

1. Silicates (most common) Contain silicon and oxygen Ex. Quartz, Olivine, Augite

2. Carbonates Contain CO 3 Ex. Calcite, Dolomite

3. Oxides Contain oxygen bonded with 1 or more elements Ex. Corundum, Hematite

4. Sulfides and 5. Sulfates Sulfides (contain Sulfur), Sulfates contain SO 4 Ex. Gypsum, Galena, Pyrite

6. Halides Contain halogens (Fluorine, Chlorine, etc.) Ex. Halite, Fluorite

7. Native Elements Mostly metals, found as individual elements Ex. Copper, Gold, Silver

How do Minerals form? 1. Cooling magma or lava 2. Hydrothermal 3. Evaporation of liquid solutions 4. Precipitate out of solution

1. Cooling magma or lava

2. Hydrothermal

3. Evaporation of liquid solutions

4. Precipitate out of solution

5 Characteristics Used to Identify Minerals 1) Hardness 2) Break Tendency 3) Luster (metallic/non-metallic) 4) Streak 5) Color

1) Hardness (Moh’s Scale) - how easily a mineral can be scratched

2) Break Tendency Fracture- breaks along rough, jagged edges Cleavage – breaks along smooth, flat surfaces Conchoidal fracture – curved breakage

3) Luster (metallic/non-metallic) - how light shines off of its surface MetallicNon-metallic

4) Streak Color of a mineral when broken or powdered

5) Color

Other ways to identify minerals Reactivity with acids Density/specific gravity Magnetism More special properties to come

Other Properties of Minerals Reactivity with Acid Magnetic Fluorescence Phosphouresence Density Crystal Shape Triboluminesence

Reactivity with acid Carbonate minerals fizz when acid is applied Magnetic Some iron rich minerals are magnetic

Fluorescence Phosphorescence

Triboluminesence