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Chapter 16, Section 1: Minerals & Mineral Resources Standards: SEV4a, c, e
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Minerals are Naturally occurring Usually inorganic solids Have characteristic chemical compositions Orderly internal structures Specific set of physical properties
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Minerals can be made of atoms of 1 single element. Ex: silver- Ag Minerals can be made of compounds- 2 or more different elements. Ex: sand- SiO 2 The arrangements of atoms and the strength of the bonds between them give minerals their physical properties. They Might Be Giants: "Meet the Elements" (BB Video) - YouTube
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Metallic minerals Shiny surfaces, opaque Can be pounded, pressed, stretched Good conductors of heat, electricity Durable, can resist corrosion Can be combined to make an alloy Alloys combine desirable properties of 2 different metals Ex: titanium can be alloyed with aluminum to make strong, lightweight metal used to make stealth fighter Examples: Aluminum- cans, siding, cars Copper- wires, heating, plumbing Gold- computers, spacecraft, medicine Iron- steel Lead- batteries, glass, ceramics
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Non-metallic minerals Good insulators Shiny or dull surfaces Can be transluscent Have variety of uses Examples: Gypsum- used to make sheetrock/wallboard Sand/gravel- glass, building materials, computer chips Sulfur- gunpowder, rubber Phosphorus- fertilizer Gemstones- jewelry (diamonds, ruby)
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Leaching- groundwater moves down thru rock & heated by magma causing dissolved minerals to crystallize. Magma- moves upward thru crust, cools, hardens, sinks due to density & forms metallic minerals Evaporites- water in seas or lakes evaporates and leaves behind deposits of dissolved minerals (ex: rock salt) Hydrothermal solutions- hot subsurface water with dissolved minerals flows thru cracks in ocean floor, dissolve other minerals in floor and form new compounds upon re- crystallization. Creates veins of ore.
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Ore minerals- contain elements of some economic value Ex: bauxite contains aluminum Ex: halite contains rock salt Gangue minerals- have no commercial value- basically waste rock Consider a Hershey’s bar with almonds… Gangue = wrapper Ore mineral = chocolate Element of economic value = almonds
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Extraction- removal of ore mineral from the ground (mining) Refining- removal of element from ore mineral & gangue Must remove gangue from ore mineral first Then remove ore mineral from element Use chemicals, magnets, or crushing devices to separate the good from the waste. For mining to be profitable, the price of the final product must be greater than the cost of extraction & refining.
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