Transcript Slide 1
Warm-Up!
Get your ISN, turn to page 30. Today we
are starting a new unit over ROCKS AND
MINERALS! Create a tab for this unit and
call it Rocks/Minerals
When finished wait for further directions.
Rocks and Minerals Circle Map
Rocks
and
Minerals
Brainstorm everything
you know about rocks
and minerals!
Open Your Book to Chapter 2!
Together we will read Sections 1 and 2, then you
will finish sections 3 and 4 on your own.
As your reading, be aware of the yellow
highlighted words in the text. These are new
vocabulary words you will be responsible for
knowing!
A vocabulary worksheet will be passed out for
you to complete by the end of class. We will
grade this together.
What is a Mineral?
What do all minerals have in
common?
All:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Are formed NATURALLY, not man made
Are NOT alive and NEVER were alive
(inorganic)
Have a definite shape (no liquids or gases)
Are elements or compounds with a unique
chemical makeup
Have a crystalline structure
Groups of Minerals
Minerals are grouped by the elements
they are made of.
Beryl (Emerald)
Calcite
Amethyst
Mineral Group
Characteristics
Contain
Silicates
oxygen & silica
The most
abundant group
of minerals
MICA
Examples
Quartz, mica
Quartz
Mineral Group
Characteristics
Make
Non-Silicates
Silver
up only
5% of the
Earth’s crust
Include some
of the most
important
minerals
Examples
iron, copper,
gold, silver,
diamonds,
rubies
Copper
Diamond
Gold
Ruby
Iron
How do minerals form?
1) Cooling of magma (hot, liquid rock and
minerals inside the earth (from the
mantle))
Fast Cooling = No Crystals (mineraloids)
Medium Cooling = small crystals
Slow Cooling = large crystals
How do minerals form?
2) Elements dissolved in liquids (usually
water)- water evaporates and forms the
crystal structure
Physical Properties of Minerals
(can be used to identify the mineral)
Color
Can be misleading
Can vary with the type of impurities
Physical Properties of Minerals
(can be used to identify the mineral)
Luster
How a mineral
reflects light
metallic = shiny like
metal
non-metallic = dull,
non-shiny surface
Pyrite has a metallic luster
Calcite has a non-metallic luster
Physical Properties of Minerals
(can be used to identify the mineral)
Streak
The color of the minerals
powder.
The color of the streak can be
different than the mineral
Streak…can help identify quartz
http://www.childrensmuseum.org/geomysteries/cube/b3.html
Physical Properties of Minerals
(can be used to identify the mineral)
Hardness
How easily a mineral scratches
materials
Mohs Hardness Scale
Scale from 1 (softest) to 10 (hardest)
Test by seeing if the mineral can scratch
different objects (like human fingernail, copper,
penny, glass, steel file)
Find out more…
“Electronic” Hardness Test
http://www.childrensmuseum.org/geomy
steries/cube/b2.html
Physical Properties of Minerals
(can be used to identify the mineral)
Other Properties
Specific gravity (*excellent clue to
mineral’s identity) http://www.childrensmuseum.org/geomysteries/cube/b4.html
Attraction to magnets
Bending of light
Reaction with hydrochloric acid
Smell & taste