Transcript Minerals
Ask these questions to see if a substance is a
minerals:
Is it a solid?
Is it formed in nature?
Is it nonliving material?
Does it have a crystalline structure?
A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid
with a crystalline structure.
Minerals are made up of elements.
Most minerals are made of compounds (1 or
more elements).
Minerals are also made of crystals.
Crystals are solid, geometric forms of minerals
produced by a repeating pattern of atoms.
Silicate – minerals that contain both silicon
and oxygen.
Make up 90% of the Earth’s crust.
Examples: Feldspar and Quartz
Nonsilicate – minerals that do not contain
both silicon and oxygen.
Examples: Calcite and Corundum
Color – not a reliable indicator (pyrite – “fools
gold”)
Luster – the way a surface reflects light.
Streak – the color in powdered form.
Cleavage – the tendency to break along flat
surfaces.
Fracture – the tendency to break unevenly along
curved or irregular surfaces.
Hardness – resistance to being scratched.
Density – how much matter in a given space.
Talc – least hard 1
Diamond – hardest 10
Take the mineral you are identifying and
scratch it with one of the 10 reference
minerals.
If the mineral you are trying to identify is
scratched by the reference mineral, then it is
harder than your mineral.
Use a mnemonic device to remember the
minerals in the scale.
Example: Terrible Giants Can Find
Alligators Or Quaint Tigers Conveniently
Digestible.
Create your own: T _______ G _______
C_______ F _______ A _______
O _______ Q _______ T _______
C _______D _______
Fluorescence – (ex. Glowing)
Chemical Reaction – (ex. Fizzing)
Optical properties – (ex. Double image)
Taste – (ex. Salty)
Magnetism
Radioactivity – minerals that contain radium
or uranium.
Evaporating Saltwater – ex. Gypsum
Salt water dries up
Limestones – ex. Dolomite
Crystallized materials that form in lakes and seas
Metamorphic Rocks – ex. Calcite
Changes in pressure, temperature, or chemical
makeup.
Hot Water Solution – ex. Gold
Dissolved metals and other elements crystallize
from magma heated water.
Pegmatites – ex. Topaz
Formed from teardrop shaped areas of magma.
Plutons – ex. Mica
Rising magma that stops and cools slowly.
Ore is a mineral deposit large enough and
pure enough to be mined for a profit.
Ore is mined two ways:
Surface mining – mined near the Earth’s surface
(copper)
Deep mining – mined deep within the Earth. (coal
and diamonds)
Reclamation – returning the land to its
original state after the mining is completed.
Costly and time consuming
Recycle them or reduce the need for minerals is a
better option.
Minerals are nonrenewable resources. This
means once you take them from the Earth,
they cannot be replaced.