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Aim: How do we identify minerals?
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Learning Objective Students will describe the properties that can be used to identify minerals.
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Do Now
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Key Terms Physical property Streak Luster Hardness Cleavage Fracture
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Physical Properties A physical property is the observable characteristic that describes an object. Physical properties help identify minerals. Some physical properties of minerals are color, streak, luster, and hardness.
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Color Color is an important property of minerals.
Color alone cannot be used to identify a mineral. Many minerals are the same color. For example, gold and pyrite are both brassy yellow. Pyrite is called “fools gold”.
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Streak The color left by a mineral is called a streak.
When a mineral is rubbed across a piece of unglazed porcelain tile, a streak is left. The streak test works only for minerals that are softer than the streak plate.
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Is it Gold or Not? A test to see if you have found pure gold or pyrite would be a streak test. Gold will leave a yellow streak and pyrite will leave a greenish-black streak. So, are those gold nuggets you have gold? Pyrite streak
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Luster The way a mineral’s surface reflects light is called luster.
Minerals have metallic or nonmetallic luster. Calcite has a glassy or a dull luster.
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Hardness The property of a mineral to resist being scratched is called hardness. Moh’s scale ranks ten minerals in hardness from 1 to 10. A mineral with a high number can scratch any mineral that has a lower number.
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Cleavage and Fracture Cleavage is the splitting of minerals into pieces with smooth, flat surfaces; the way a mineral shows cleavage is always the same for that mineral. Fracture is the splitting of a mineral into jagged or uneven pieces.
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Checking Concepts What property allows one mineral to scratch another?
The color of a powdered mineral on an unglazed porcelain tile is its ________. The softest mineral on Moh’s hardness scale is _________.
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Answers Hardness Streak Talc
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The End
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