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Miner als

Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

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Page 1: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Minerals

Page 2: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What is a Mineral?A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance.

Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks.

Page 3: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Minerals1. Naturally

occurring2. Inorganic 3. Solid4. Crystal structure5. Definite

chemical composition

Page 4: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Naturally Occurring Minerals must occur

naturally. NOT man made. Cement, bricks,

steel, and glass all come from materials found in the earth, but these are made by people.

Page 5: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Inorganic Inorganic

materials were never living.

Coal is made from the remains of ancient plants and animals, so coal is not a mineral.

Page 6: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Solid The state of matter

when the material holds a definite shape and definite volume.

Particles are fixed in place…meaning they don’t move around.

Page 7: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Crystal Structure The particles line

up in a regular, repeating pattern.

Has faces: flat sides that meet at sharp edges and corners.

Page 8: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Definite Chemical Composition Always contains

certain elements. Almost all minerals

are compounds, which are two or more different elements bonded together (holding hands).

Pyrite is two sulfur atoms holding hands with an atom of iron.

Page 9: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Groups of Minerals Divided into two

groups based on mineral composition

Silicate minerals Nonsilicate

minerals

Page 10: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Silicate Minerals Contain silicon

and oxygen Make up 90%

of Earth’s crust Ex.

Quartz Feldspar Mica

Page 11: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Nonsilicate Minerals NO silicon Usually contain carbon, oxygen,

fluorine, and sulfur. Ex: copper, silver, gold

Page 12: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Identifying Minerals Each mineral

has specific properties that can be used to identify it.

Page 13: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Hardness A measure of how

easily a mineral can be scratched.

Goes from 1= talc (talcum or baby powder) to 10= diamond!

Friedrich Mohs developed the scale we use today.

Page 14: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Density Minerals will have a

certain density regardless of the size of the sample.

Density, or specific gravity, is the comparison of the weight of a substance to the weight of an equal volume of water.

Page 15: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Color Not especially useful in

identifying minerals, as some minerals like quartz can come in a variety of colors.

Impurities and weathering can change the color of a mineral, so color is not the best way to identify a mineral.

Page 16: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Streak The color of its

powder. Not always the

same as the color of the mineral.

Pyrite has a gold color, but its streak is a greenish black.

Much more reliable than color.

Page 17: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Luster The way a mineral

reflects light. Can be metallic or

non-metallic. Shiny or dull. Earthy, waxy,

pearly, glassy.

Page 18: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Crystal System Six groups based

on number and angle of the faces.

Example: Halite is cubic, as it always forms perfect cubes.

Page 19: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Cleavage The way a mineral breaks apart. If it splits easily along flat surfaces

the property is cleavage.

Page 20: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Fracture A mineral fractures if

it breaks in a random or irregular pattern.

A dirt clod fractures! When a mineral

fractures it just crumples into small pieces.

Page 21: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

Special Properties

Some minerals have a property known as fluorescence, which means they glow under UV light.

Others are magnetic, radioactive or have electrical properties.

Page 22: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What Do You Remember? What are the two groups called that we

break minerals out into? Silicate and non silicate

Page 23: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What Do You Remember? What’s the difference between a rock and a

mineral? Minerals are naturally occurring from the

Earth and rocks are made up from minerals

Page 24: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What Do You Remember? Define luster The way a mineral reflects light.

Page 25: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What Do You Remember? Which group of minerals makes up 90% of

the Earth’s crust? silicates

Page 26: Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks

What Do You Remember? Name 5 minerals