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Rocks & Minerals Minerals What is a Mineral?      Naturally Occurring Inorganic Solid Definite Chemical Formula Definite Crystal Structure Naturally Occurring  Formed by natural processes not in the laboratory - Is an Ice Cube a mineral? - Is the ice on the windshield of a car a mineral? Inorganic  Formed by inorganic processes; not living  Does not contain chains of carbon atoms Solid  Not gas or liquid -H2O as ice in a glacier is a mineral, but water is not Definite Crystal Structure  Highly ordered atomic arrangement of atoms in regular geometric patterns Apatite Feldspar Diamond Quartz 8 Definite Chemical Formula  Minerals are expressed by a specific chemical formula -Gold (Au) -Calcite (CaCO3) -Quartz (SiO2) -Pyrite (FeS2) Composition of the Earth’s Crust  Eight Elements that make up over 98% of Earth’s Crust -Oxygen (O) -Silicon (SI) -Aluminum (Al) -Iron (Fe) -Calcium (Ca) -Sodium (Na) -Potassium (K) -Magnesium (Mg) Where Do Minerals Come From? Magma Evaporation How Are Minerals Identified?         Color Luster Hardness Streak Density Crystal Shape Cleavage and Fracture Special Properties Color  Usually the first and most easily observed -Some minerals are always the same color -Some minerals can have many colors ROSE QUARTZ QUARTZ SMOKY QUARTZ Luster  General appearance of a mineral surface in reflected light Glassy-Obsidian Hardness  Resistance to scratching by different items; “scratchability” Mohs Hardness Scale >2 fingernail 3 penny ~5 Steel of a pocket knife 5.5 Window Glass 6.6 Steel of a file 7 quartz crystal Mohs Mineral Hardness Scale 1) Talc Softest 2) Gypsum 3) Calcite 1 5 4) Flourite 5) Apatite 9 2 6) Feldspar 6 7) Quartz 8) Topaz 3 7 9) Corundum 10) Diamond 10 Hardest 4 8 Streak   The color of a finely powdered mineral Determined by rubbing the mineral on a piece of unglazed porcelain (streak plate) Density  The amount of matter in a given space (Mass/Volume) Crystal Shape  Minerals have a characteristic crystal shape resulting from the atomic packing of the atoms when the mineral is forming Cleavage and Fracture   Cleavage is the tendency of a mineral to split or crack along parallel or flat planes Fracture occurs when a mineral breaks at random lines instead of at consistent cleavage planes. BIOTITE 1 Direction of Cleavage QUARTZ No Cleavage Obsidian Conchoidal Fracture Special Properties      Magnetism (Magnetite) Glowing under ultraviolet light (Fluorite) Salty taste (Halite) Smell (Sulfur) Magnetite Reaction to HCl (Calcite) Economic Importance of Minerals  Minerals are in many things we see and use everyday such as; bricks, glass, cement, plaster, iron, gold Every American Requires 40,000 Pounds of New Minerals per Year  at this level of consumption the average newborn infant will need a lifetime supply of: -795 lbs of lead (car batteries, electric components) -757 lbs of zinc (to make brass, rubber, paints) -1500lbs of copper (electrical motors, wirings -3593 lbs aluminum (soda cans, aircraft) -32,700 lbs of iron (kitchen utensils, automobiles, buildings) -28,213 lbs of salt (cooking, detergents) -1,238,101 lbs of stone, sand, gravel, cement (roads, homes, etc.) Rocks Rocks  Made of two or more different minerals that have been:  cemented together  squeezed and heated together  melted and cooled together. Types of Rocks    Igneous Sedimentary Metamorphic Igneous Rocks  Most igneous rocks are produced deep underground by the cooling and hardening of magma Sedimentary Rocks  Formed from the breaking apart of other rocks (igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary rocks) and the cementation, compaction and recrystallization of these broken pieces of rock Fact about the Mississippi River Did You Know?   The Mississippi River carries an average of 436,000 tons of sediment each day It moves an average of 159,000,000 tons of sediment a year Metamorphic Rocks  Formed from heat and pressure changing the original or parent rock into a completely new rock. The parent rock can be either sedimentary, igneous, or even another metamorphic rock. The Rock Cycle  The diagram of the rock cycle shows how the earth's rocks are changed again and again Classification of Igneous Rocks   Composition-refers to the minerals that make up the rock Texture-shape, size, arrangement and distribution of minerals that make up the rock Composition  Extrusive- Formed from lava; volcanic Obsidian  Pumice Intrusive- Formed deep within the earth Granite Textures  Glassy  Obsidian  Fine-grained Basalt Coarse-grained Granite  Porphyritic Granite Classification of Sedimentary Rocks    Clastic Rocks- Made of the fragments of previously existing rocks Organic Rocks- Come from organisms Chemical Rocks- Formed by inorganic processes such as evaporation Clastics Rocks  Conglomerate  Sandstone  Mudstone Organic Rocks  Limestone Coquina Fossiliferous Limestone Chemical Rocks  Limestone Metamorphic Rocks   Foliated- Parallel alignment of flattened mineral grains and pebbles Unfoliated-Rocks that are not banded and do not break into layers Foliated Gneisse Unfoliated Marble Distribution of Rocks in the U.S.