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Published byKaya Lins Modified over 9 years ago
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Moh’s Hardness Scale By Becky Clark Creator of the hardness scale Friedrich Mohs
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Some minerals are softer than others. How hard a mineral is can help identify it. We measure the hardness of minerals by scratching them. In 1822, Frederick Mohs published his scale for determining a minerals hardness. The Mohs Scale measures hardness. It ranges from 1 to 10, in which the softest material is talc with 1 and the hardest is diamond with 10. The harder the stone, the more resistant it is to scratching.
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How to Perform the Test 1) Select a fresh, clean surface on the mineral to be tested. 2) Hold the mineral firmly and attempt to scratch it. 3) Look for a scratch or line.
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"Tools" for Testing Hardness There are several simple "tools" people often have with them that can be useful in determining the hardness of an unknown mineral. Your fingernail has a hardness of 2.5. A penny has a hardness of 3.0 The steel paper clip has a hardness of about 5.5.
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Mineral Scratched by Finger Nail? Scratched by Penny? Scratched by Paper Clip? Number of tools that Scratched?
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The following table shows the hardness of these materials: 1 Piece of chalk 3.5 Penny 2 Plaster of Paris 4 Iron Nail 2.5 Fingernail 5.5 Window Glass 3 Gold 6.5 Steel File
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SONG: MR. MOHS TOES
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