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Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid...

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Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2
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Page 1: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Minerals

Chapter 3Sec. 1 & 2

Page 2: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

What Is a Mineral?

• A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure.

• All minerals contain one or more of the 92 naturally occurring elements.

Page 3: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

What is a Mineral?

• Answer four questions. • If any answer is “no” – NOT a

mineral!

Page 4: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

What is a Mineral?

• 1) Is it nonliving material?

• 2) Is it a solid?

• 3) Is it formed in nature?

• 4) Does it have a crystalline structure?

Page 5: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

What Are Crystals?

• Crystals are solid, geometric forms of minerals

• Repeating pattern of atoms or molecules creates the crystals

• A crystal’s shape is determined by the arrangement of the atoms or molecules within the crystal.

Page 6: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Crystal Structures

Page 7: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Two Groups of MineralsSilicate vs. Nonsilicate

• Silicate Minerals: Minerals that contain a combination of silicon and oxygen molecules. These minerals make up more than 90% of Earth’s crust. Examples: Quartz, Feldspar, and Mica.

Page 8: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.
Page 9: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

• Nonsilicate Minerals: Minerals that do not contain a combination of the elements silicon and oxygen. They are made up of carbon, oxygen (without silicon), fluorine, and sulfur. Examples; Copper, Calcite, Fluorite, and Gypsum

Page 10: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.
Page 11: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Identifying Minerals

• There are seven ways to determine the identity of minerals.

Page 12: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Color

• Not usually the best way to identify a mineral; for reasons such as impurities.

Page 13: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Luster

• The way a surface reflects light; usually described as shiny or dull

• Shiny = metallic luster• Dull = submetallic, nonmetallic• Observe samples

Page 14: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.
Page 15: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Streak

• The color of a mineral in powdered form.

• A mineral’s streak can be found rubbing the mineral against a piece of unglazed porcelain called a streak plate.

Page 16: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.
Page 17: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Cleavage and Fracture

• Cleavage: the tendency of some minerals to break along smooth, flat surfaces.

• Fracture: the tendency of some minerals to break unevenly along curved or irregular surfaces.

Page 18: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.
Page 19: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

This sample of quartz shows a curved fracture pattern called conchoidal fracture.

Page 20: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Hardness

• A mineral’s resistance to being scratched.

• Scientists use Mohs hardness scale to determine the hardness of minerals.

• ***The greater a mineral’s resistance to being scratched is, the higher the mineral’s rating is.

Page 22: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Density

• The measure of how much matter is in a given amount of space.

Page 23: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Special Properties

• Some minerals can be identified by special properties they have, such as taste (NEVER taste in science class!), magnetism, fluorescence, radioactivity, chemical reaction, and optical properties.

Page 24: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

Special Properties

Page 25: Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2. What Is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. All minerals.

What are Rocks?

• Rocks are a combination of one or more minerals.


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