Transcript Slide 1
A
substance that:
• Forms in nature
• Is a solid
• Has a definite
chemical make-up
• Has a crystal structure
All
minerals form in nature.
• Most involve non-living things
• Some can also be produced by organisms that
grow bones or shells
Have
a definite volume and a rigid
shape.
Water
is not a mineral, but ice is. Explain.
Element-
substance that contains one
type of atom.
All minerals are made of elements or
compounds.
• Compounds are groups of elements
• Minerals made of compounds are made of the
same couple of elements in certain proportions.
Crystal-
A solid in which atoms are
arranged in an orderly, repeating, 3
dimensional pattern.
Graphite and Diamonds are made of the
same thing.
• Different arrangements create different
substances.
Perfect
crystals are rare.
Silicates
• Silicon and Oxygen
• 90% of the rocks on the earth’s crust
Carbonates
• Carbon and Oxygen
• 2nd most common mineral group
Oxides
• Contains minerals from which most metals are
refined
We
identify minerals by testing them
against properties that are known.
Each
mineral has certain properties.
Color
Density
Hardness
Cleavage
Luster
Fracture
Some
minerals can be any color.
Tiny
bits of elements that is not part of its
normal makeup.
Near
the earth’s surface.
Defects
Outer
Streak
color
How
2
light reflects
main types
• Metallic
Looks like it is made of metal
• Non-Metallic
Looks more glassy
CLEAVAGE
Break along flat surfaces.
FRACTURE
• Tells us how the atoms are
bonded.
• The mineral is weaker in
the direction it breaks.
Mica
Tendency to break into
irregular pieces.
The bonds that join atoms
are fairly strong in all
directions
The
amount of mass in a given volume.
Gold
The
and pyrite
mass of gold is almost 4x pyrite
Resistance
to being scratched.
Determined
by the atoms’ bond.
• Stronger bonds make harder minerals
Can
be scratched by minerals with equal
or more hardness.
REACTIONS
Example: Calcite
React with acid.
The acid will bubble and
CO2 will form.
FLOURESCENCE
Useful in identifying
minerals.
Example: Flourite
Glow when exposed to
ultra-violet light.
Limited value in identifying
minerals.
MAGNETIC
Example: Magnetite
Magnets are commonly
used to separate magnetic
and non-magnetic minerals
RADIOACTIVITY
Contain unstable elements.
Change into other elements
over time.
When they change, they
release energy.
That is what is measured to
determine radioactivity.