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How are Minerals Identified?

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Presentation on theme: "How are Minerals Identified?"— Presentation transcript:

1 How are Minerals Identified?

2 Minerals and how they form
A Mineral is a naturally formed, nonliving solid that has a crystalline or repeating, structure. Mineral crystals can form deep within Earth, in caves, from seawater, in underground water.

3 Minerals also form inside geodes.
Geodes are dull on the outside but inside has crystals that may be bright.

4 Color and Streak Salt Minerals: Rubies, quartz
Metal Minerals: Copper, silver, gold Scientists identify minerals by using their properties.

5 Streak is the color of the powder left behind when a mineral rubbed against a streak plate.
A streak plate is a rough white tile. Minerals can change color if exposed to air or rain for a long time.

6 Luster, Cleavage, and Fracture
The way that a mineral’s surface reflects light is a property called luster. The luster of nonmetallic minerals is described as glassy, silky, waxy, pearly, or earthy.

7 Another way to identify a mineral is the way it breaks.
Some minerals have cleavage, the property of splitting along a smooth, flat surface. Some minerals do not break along flat surfaces, instead they fracture.

8 Fracture is the property of breaking unevenly or along a curved surface.
Hardness is a mineral’s ability to scratch other materials or be scratched by other materials.

9 A scale on the Moh’s hardness scale ranks minerals from 1 to 10 according to their hardness.
Talc is the softest mineral ranked 1 Diamond is the hardest mineral ranked 10 A mineral can scratch another mineral if its hardness value is greater or equal to the other mineral’s hardness value.

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