CHAPTER 14 ROCKS: MINERAL MIXTURES

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Rocks Chapter 4.
Advertisements

Rocks and the Rock Cycle
Rocks and the Rock Cycle
Rocks 6.E.2.1 Summarize the structure of the Earth, including the layers, the mantle and core based on the relative position,
IGNEOUS ROCKS Pg 99 text book
Chapter 2 Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
SC Standard Explain how igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rocks are interrelated in the rock cycle.
Minerals & Rock Unit Notes 7th Grade Science
Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500.
Rocks 3.1 The Rock Cycle  Rocks are any solid mass of minerals, or mineral-like matter, occurring naturally as part of our planet.  Types of Rocks 1.
Chapter 4 Mrs. Veurink’s Earth Science
Ch. 14: The Rock Cycle Rock a naturally occurring solid mixture of one or more minerals or organic matter. Rock Cycle- The Process by which new rock is.
Rocks and Minerals.
MineralsIgneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks Metamorphic Rocks The Rock Cycle
Ch. 4 Study Guide Answers.
Quiz – Chapter 10 Vocab Igneous rock – define 2 points
Chapter 2 Review.
Rocks and Their Origins Petrologic Classification.
Earth’s Endless Recycling Planet
Mineral and Rock Vocabulary
Rocks Rocks are defined as a mixture of one or more minerals and organic matter There are three types of rocks: – Igneous – Sedimentary – Metamorphic.
Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
Rock Cycle Unit Vocabulary 7 th Grade Science. Weathering The breaking down of Earth’s materials by natural processes (water, wind, ice, chemicals, etc.)
ROCKS.
Rocks !.
Granite is a mixture of:
Types of Rocks Objective #1: Describe and classify igneous rocks
Chapter 4 Rocks.
How to Use This Presentation To View the presentation as a slideshow with effects select “View” on the menu bar and click on “Slide Show”, or simply press.
Rocks Review Game. A naturally occurring, solid mixture of one or ore minerals and organic matter.
Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
Chapter 4 Rocks: Mixtures of Minerals
CHANGING EARTH Rocks, fossils, earthquakes, volcanoes.
Classifying Rocks.
Rock Types Rocks Igneous Rocks Sedimentary Rocks Metamorphic Rocks Etc. Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
The Rock Cycle & Igneous Rocks
Chapter 4- Rocks: Mineral Textures By Samantha Pereira.
The Rock Cycle Chapters 5 & 6. What are the types of rock? Igneous rocks Form from cooling magma Recall: magma is molten material beneath Earth’s surface.
Chapter 4 Table of Contents Section 1 The Rock Cycle
< BackNext >PreviewMain Rocks: Mineral Mixtures Section 1 The Rock CycleThe Rock Cycle Section 2 Igneous RockIgneous Rock Section 3 Sedimentary RockSedimentary.
Rocks ROCKS Chapter 3.
Mrs. Hutson.   Sand is a product of weathering, which breaks rock into pieces.  Over time, sand grains may be compacted, or compressed, and then cemented.
< BackNext >PreviewMain The Rock Cycle Chapter 4 Key PointsNotes What is a rock? Composition Texture.
Chapter 4 Section 3 Sedimentary Rocks. What You Will Learn Describe the origin of sedimentary rock. Describe the three main categories of sedimentary.
Chapter 4. The Rock Cycle Make sure your rock cycle is drawn!!
Unit 3 Lesson 3 Three Classes of Rock Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
d A rock is a naturally occurring solid mixture of one or more minerals, or organic matter. Rocks are classified by how they are formed, their composition,
Rock cycle.
Rock Notes- 3 types of Rock
Rocks and The Rock Cycle. What is a Rock? A rock is a mixture of one or more minerals, glass, and sometimes, consolidated organic material (something.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu The Rock Cycle Lecture.
Rocks. Rocks  Rocks are solid earth materials formed from a mixture of minerals and sometimes other materials. Rocks are classified into one of three.
Rocks 3 Types of Rocks 1. Igneous Means “from fire” Means “from fire” Forms when magma (molten rock) cools and hardens Forms when magma (molten rock) cools.
Chapter 4 Key Points Notes What is a rock? Composition Texture
Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
Quiz – Chapter 10 Vocab Igneous rock – define 1.5 points
Rocks: Mineral Mixtures
MINERAL MIXTURES CHAPTER 2.
Chapter 4 Preview Section 1 The Rock Cycle Section 2 Igneous Rock
Rocks Hafeet mountain.
1. Name the 3 kinds of rocks What are rocks? How are rocks classified?
Classifying Rocks SE65 c. Construct an explanation of how to classify rocks by their formation and how rocks change through geologic processes in the.
BELLWORK Write the following definition in your science notebook:
By amores by josh.
Classifying Rocks SE65 c. Construct an explanation of how to classify rocks by their formation and how rocks change through geologic processes in the.
Rock Vocabulary.
Types of Rocks.
Minerals and the Rock Cycle
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 14 ROCKS: MINERAL MIXTURES Rocks change through a process called the Rock Cycle and rocks are classified by how they form, by what they are made of, and by their texture.

Chapter 14 Objectives We will learn about the Rock Cycle We will learn about the three types of rocks We will learn how each type is formed We will learn how each type is classified

Section 1: The Rock Cycle What we will learn in this section: Describe two ways in which rocks are used by people. Describe the four processes that shape Earth’s features. Describe how rocks move through the rock cycle. List two characteristics of rocks that help classify them.

The Rock Cycle Rock- naturally occurring solid mixture of one or more minerals or organic matter. Rocks are always changing. Rock Cycle- the series of processes in which a rock forms, changes from one type to another, is destroyed, and forms again by geological processes.

The Rock Cycle

Value of rock Rock has always been valuable. Rocks were the first form of tools. It has been used to make things in ancient and modern times.

Processes That Shape the Earth Weathering, Erosion, and Deposition Weathering- breaks rocks down into fragments. Erosion- the process by which wind, water, ice, or gravity transports soil and sediment from one location to another. Deposition- the process in which material is laid down.

Processes That Shape the Earth Heat and Pressure Rocks also form under high heat and pressure. High pressure can create sedimentary rocks. Add heat to those rocks and they can melt and turn into Metamorphic rocks.

Processes That Shape the Earth Magma can reach the surface through volcanoes or can cool in the ground and create igneous rocks.

Processes That Shape the Earth How the cycle continues….. Buried rock can come to the surface by uplift and erosion. Picture the Earth as a float in a pool, the land is the float and we are “floating” on hot magma.

Round and Round It Goes The rock cycle is always moving very slowly. New rocks are created, then destroyed, just to be created again. There is no set path to the Rock Cycle, rocks travel in all directions.

Rock Classification Rocks are divided into three main classes, but now we go further. Rocks are divided further on how they form. Scientist study rocks closely to find out how to classify them. The two main characteristics are composition and texture.

Rock Classification Composition- the chemical makeup of a rock; describes either the minerals or other materials in the rock. Composition means the percentage of minerals or other materials that make up each rock.

Rock Classification Texture- the quality of a rock that is based on the sizes, shapes, and positions of the rocks grains. Three types of texture: fine-grained, medium-grained, and coarse-grained. Texture tells us how and where the rocks were formed.

Section 2: Igneous Rocks What are going to learn: We will describe the ways that igneous rocks form. We will explain how the cooling rate of magma affects the texture of igneous rocks. We will be able to distinguish between igneous rock that cools within the Earth’s crust and igneous rock that cools at Earth’s surface.

Igneous Rocks Igneous is Latin for “FIRE”! Igneous rocks form when hot magma or lava cools and hardens. Magma- INSIDE the Earth. Lava- OUTSIDE the Earth.

Origins of Igneous Rock Begins as magma. Three ways magma is formed: When rock is heated. When pressure is released. When rock changes composition.

Origins of Igneous Rock When water freezes, it makes ice. When magma “freezes”, it makes igneous rock. Each mineral has its own melting and freezing point. Remember, rocks are made from many minerals put together. This means the igneous rock freezes at different temperatures. (Some parts freeze faster than others.)

Composition and Texture of Igneous Rocks Rocks made from light colored minerals are called felsic rocks. Rocks made from dark colored minerals are called mafic rocks.

Composition and Texture of Igneous Rocks Texture- Texture of igneous rocks depend on how fast they cool. Faster cooling causes SMALLER crystals. Slower cooling causes LARGER crystals.

Igneous Rock Formations Igneous rocks form both inside the Earth and outside the Earth. Intrusive Igneous Rock- rock formed from the cooling and solidification of magma beneath the Earth’s surface. Plutons are large intrusive bodies of igneous rock. Types of plutons include: Batholiths, Stocks, dikes, and sills.

Intrusive Igneous Rock

Extrusive Igneous Rock Extrusive Igneous Rock- rock that forms as a result of volcanic activity at or near the Earth’s surface. Lava cools quickly so it has small or no crystals. Lava also forms in oceans to create new ocean floor.

Extrusive Igneous Rock

Section 3: Sedimentary Rock What we are going to learn: We will describe where sedimentary rock comes from. We will describe the three main categories of sedimentary rock. We will describe the three types of sedimentary structures.

Origins of Sedimentary Rock Weathering cause rocks to break into pieces. Erosion transports the pieces, called sediment, from one place to another.

Origins of Sedimentary Rock Sediment is deposited in layers, over time these layers are compacted into rock. The most noticeable feature of sedimentary rock is the strata. Strata- layers of rock.

Composition of Sedimentary Rock Sedimentary rock is classified by how it forms. Three main categories of sedimentary rock: Clastic Sedimentary Rock Chemical Sedimentary Rock Organic Sedimentary Rock

Clastic Sedimentary Rock Made of rock fragments (chunks) that are cemented together. Clastic Sedimentary Rocks have three types of textures: Fine-grained Medium-grained Coarse-grained

Chemical Sedimentary Rock Chemical Sedimentary Rock forms from dissolved minerals in water. Rain dissolves minerals in rocks and carries them to oceans where they are deposited and harden to form rock.

Organic Sedimentary Rock Organic Sedimentary Rock has fossils in them. These fossils become cemented together to form fossiliferous limestone.

Sedimentary Rock Structures Stratification- the process in which sedimentary rocks are arranged in layers. Strata differ from one another depending on the kind, size, and color of their sediment.

Sedimentary Rock Structures Sedimentary rocks can record the motion of wind and waves on lakes, oceans, rivers, and sand dunes. Ripple marks and mud cracks are formed in the sediment and then hardened into rock. Even rain drops and foot prints can be preserved in the mud.

Metamorphic Rock What we will learn: We will describe two ways a rock can undergo metamorphism. We will explain how the minerals in rocks change as the rocks undergo metamorphism. We will describe the two categories of metamorphic rock.

Metamorphic Rock Rocks change through metamorphism with heat and pressure. This comes from the Greek word meta, meaning “change”, and morphos, meaning “shape”. Metamorphic rocks are rocks that have changed structure, texture, or composition.

Origins of Metamorphic Rocks Temperature and/or pressure surrounding a rock can change and make a metamorphic rock. Most metamorphism takes place from 132°F and 1,832°F, and at depths deeper than 1.25miles inside the Earth.

Contact Metamorphism When magma flows through the Earth’s crust it melts the rock it touches. The rocks then re-harden into new, metamorphic rocks.

Regional Metamorphism Pressure in the Earth causes pieces of crust to collide with each other superheating and melting the rock. This changes large areas underneath contiential crust.

Composition of Metamorphic Rocks During metamorphism the minerals in a rock change form into more stable minerals. Some of these minerals form at certain temperatures, these are called index minerals.

Composition of Metamorphic Rock Scientist use these index minerals to tell at what temperature, depth, and pressure the new rocks were formed. More heat and pressure can cause one metamorphic rock to morph into another kind.

Textures of Metamorphic Rock All metamorphic rock have one of two textures, foliated and non-foliated. Foliated- the texture of metamorphic rock in which the mineral grains are arranged in planes or bands.

Textures of Metamorphic Rock If you see “bands” on the rock then it was formed with the highest temperature and pressure.

Textures of Metamorphic Rock Non-foliated- the texture of metamorphic rock in which the mineral grains are not arranged in planes or bands. Non-foliated rock are made from only a few minerals, these minerals melt and re-form in a process called recrystallization.

Metamorphic Rock Structures Metamorphic rock structures are cause by force placed on the rock when it is formed. Deformation is what the change in shape is called. The rock becomes folded or bended, this can be really small or really large.

THE END!