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Chapter 2.1 What Are Minerals?
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What Are Minerals? A MINERAL is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition.
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Characteristics of Minerals
Five Must-Have Characteristics A mineral must be: Naturally Occurring Inorganic Solid Crystal Structure Definite Chemical Composition
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Naturally Occurring A mineral must occur naturally.
Cement, brick, steel, and glass all come from substances found in Earth’s crust, but they are manufactured by people.
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Inorganic Inorganic – the mineral cannot arise from materials that were once part of a living thing. Ex. Coal is NOT a mineral because it is made up the remains of plants and animals.
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Crystal Structure What Type of Structure Must It Have?
A mineral must have a crystal structure – a repeating pattern of a mineral’s particles that forms a solid. Faces – a crystal’s flat side that meets at sharp edges and corners.
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Cinnabar – composed of the elements Mercury and Sulfur
Chemical Composition What Type of Composition Must It Have? A mineral must have a definite chemical composition – it always contains certain elements in definite proportions; most minerals are compounds. Cinnabar – composed of the elements Mercury and Sulfur
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Element vs. Compound What Is the Difference?
Element – a substance composed of a single kind of atom. Ex. Hydrogen Compound – Two or more elements combined so that the elements no longer have distinct properties Ex. Water H20
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Identifying Minerals Identification by Properties Properties:
Color (This can vary.) Streak Luster Hardness Density Crystal Shape Cleavage and Fracture Special Properties
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Streak What Is the Streak Test?
The streak of a mineral is the color of its powder. The streak color and the mineral color are often different. To test: rub a mineral against an unglazed tile (streak plate).
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Luster Luster – used to describe how a mineral reflects light from its surface. Minerals containing metals are often shiny. Earthy, waxy, and pearly.
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Luster
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Luster
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Hardness Friedrich Mohs invented a test to describe and compare the hardness of minerals. Mohs Hardness Scale Ranks 10 minerals from softest to hardest.
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How Does the Mohs Scale Work?
Gypsum (2) will scratch talc (1). Calcite (3) will scratch gypsum (2) Fluorite (4) will scratch calcite (3), etc.
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Density Each mineral has a characteristic of density.
Density – or mass per unit volume; Density = mass/volume. Displacement – the volume of the displaced water equals the volume of the the sample.
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Crystal Structure The Required Shape/Structure
Minerals have a crystal structure Cubic Hexagonal Tetragonal Orthorhombic Monoclinic Triclinic
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Crystal Structure
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Cleavage What Is Cleavage?
Cleavage – A mineral’s ability to split easily along a flat surface. The ability to break apart depends on the arrangement of the atoms in the mineral. Cubic Cleavage Basal Cleavage
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Mineral Fracture Fracture – How a mineral looks when it breaks apart in an irregular way.
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Special Properties Fluorescence – minerals that glow under ultraviolet light. Magnetism - ex. Loadstone Chemical reactivity- ex. Calcite gives off carbon dioxide. Electrical properties – ex. quartz.
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