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Published byDarren Wheeler Modified over 9 years ago
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Minerals Are: * Solid, inorganic materials that form naturally on or beneath the E’s surface.
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Have a definite chemical composition. Usually solid. High temp. inside the Earth can melt them.
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Inorganic – not made from things that were once alive.
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Naturally Occurring – not man-made. Formed as a result of processes in the natural world.
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Have definite crystal structure – repeating patterns of a mineral’s atoms. Use a magnifying glass to see “flat edges” where breaks have occurred.
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Definite Chemical Composition – Each type of mineral has the same proportions of the same elements.
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How Mineral Form Most minerals form when molten material (magma) cools and hardens inside Earth or on the surface Some form when a solution evaporates on Earth’s surface –Ex. Halite NaCl
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How Minerals are Formed If magma or lava cool slowly then large crystals will form –Ex. Quartz If magma or lava cool quickly the small crystals will form –Ex. Feldspar
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Identify Minerals Look at the Properties – characteristics that make that mineral different from other minerals.
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Ways to Identify: Hardness Color Streak Luster Cleavage Density
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Identifying Minerals Hardness- use Moh’s hardness scale p 95 of textbook
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Color Not good to use. Several minerals come in different colors.
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Streak - color of the mineral’s powder found when the mineral is rubbed on a piece of tile
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Luster - how a mineral reflects light: glassy, pearly, metallic, and earthy
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Cleavage & Fracture Cleavage: split apart easily along flat surfaces. Fracture: irregular surface where it breaks
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Cleavage
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Fracture
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Density Density = mass/volume Use a balance to find mass in grams Use a graduated cylinder to find volume in milliliters
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Other Properties: Chemical reaction: fizzes with vinegar (Calcite) Transparent – can see through it Opaque – pearly, cloudy Magnetic* High Mass
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