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Bellringer # 32 • Read “What are rocks good for?” page 755 • Answer both questions in your journal. Chapter 21 S.3 Minerals • A mineral is a naturally occurring inorganic solid with an orderly crystalline structure and a definite chemical composition. Quartz Mineral Characteristics • 1. Naturally occurring- a mineral forms by natural geologic processes. • 2. Solid substance- minerals are solids within the temperature ranges that are normal for Earth’s surface. • 3. Orderly crystalline structure- their atoms or ions are arranged in an orderly and repetitive manner. – All minerals are made of crystals. – Some crystals can be very large (quartz) or very small (sulfur). – Quartz has an orderly structure. = mineral – Opal does not have an orderly structure. = mineraloid • 4. Definite chemical composition- most minerals are chemical compounds that are made of two or more elements. – Quartz- 2 oxygen atoms for every silicon atom. (SiO2) – Gold and silver are made of only one element. • 5. Inorganic- to be inorganic, a material must not contain organic matter (living material). If a sample contains fossils, it is not considered a mineral, it would be a rock. How Minerals Form • • • • Minerals form nearly everywhere on Earth. Silicates- deep in the Earth Carbonates- warm, ocean waters Clay minerals- at the Earth’s surface, exposed to weathering. • There are four major processes by which minerals form: 1. Crystallization from Magma • Magma is molten rock. • When it cools elements combine to form minerals. • The first ones to crystallize are those rich in iron, calcium, and magnesium. • The composition of the magma changes as minerals form. • Minerals rich in sodium, potassium, and aluminum form second. Ex: Feldspar Muscovite Hornblende Quartz 2. Precipitation • The water on Earth contains dissolved substances. • When the water evaporates the substances can react to form minerals. • Changes of temperature can cause dissolved substances to do the same thing. • Minerals are left behind or precipitate out of the water. EX: Limestone Cave Ex: Halite and Calcite 3. Pressure and Temperature • Some minerals form when existing minerals are subjected to changes in pressure and temperature. • Increased pressure = recrystallize. – Atoms are rearranged to form more compact minerals. • Temperature changes cause minerals to be unstable. • New minerals form that are stable at the new temperature. 4. Hydrothermal Solutions • A mixture of hot water and dissolved substances. – 100 degrees C and 300 degrees C • Chemical reactions form new minerals. • When the cool minerals like quartz and pyrite can form. • Ex: – Bornite – Pyrite Mineral Groups • Over 3,800 minerals have been named. • Several new ones are identified each year. • Common minerals, together with thousands of others that form on Earth, can be classified into groups based on their composition. • The silicates are the most common on Earth. Silicates • The two most abundant elements in the Earth’s crust are Silicon and Oxygen. • Si and O combine to form a structure called the silicon-oxygen tetrahedron. • The tetrahedron can form different kinds of bonds to form different kinds of minerals. • They form when magma cools and sometimes at high temperatures and pressure. • Ex: Olivine, augite, micas, quartz, feldspar. Carbonates • Second most common mineral group. • Minerals that contain the elements carbon, oxygen, and one or more other metallic elements. • Calcite is the most common CaCO3 • Dolomite has magnesium and calcium • Limestone and marble are rocks that have carbonates. Oxides • Minerals that contain oxygen and one or more other elements which are usually metals. • Rutile- it’s titanium oxide – Magma cools • Corundum- aluminum oxide – Temper and pressure changes • Hematite- iron oxide. – Exposed to water Sulfates and Sulfides • Minerals that contain the element sulfur. • Sulfates – Anhydrite – Gypsum – Form when mineral rich waters evaporate. • Sulfides EX: galena (mined for lead) , sphalerite, pyrite (fools gold) – Form from thermal or hot water solutions. Halides • Minerals that contain a halogen ion plus one or more other elements. • Elements from Group 7A. – Fluorine, chlorine • EX: Halite (NaCl) table salt, – Fluorite (CaF2) used for making steel. • Forms when salt water evaporates Native Elements • A group of minerals that exist in a pure form. • EX: gold, silver, copper, sulfur, carbon. • Native forms of carbon – Diamond, graphite • Some form from hydrothermal solutions Homework • Read “A Possible Link Between Volcanism and Climate Change in the Geologic Past” • Answer the questions. • Due tomorrow. Bellringer # 33 • How would you characterize a mineral? • List as many characteristics as you can. • EX: think about a diamond, different minerals that we discussed yesterday (halite, quartz, feldspar, copper) or a birthstone, how would you characterize it. Properties of Minerals • Minerals occur in different colors and shapes. • They also very in the way they reflect light and break. • Some minerals are very hard and some have an odor. • All of these characteristics can be used to identify them. Color • One of the first things you may notice. • Color is unique to some but not all minerals. – Not useful in identifying many minerals. • Small amounts of different elements can give the same mineral different colors. • EX: sapphire most of the time they are blue but they can be every color except red. Some are lab created. Streak • The color of a mineral in its powdered form. • Rub a mineral across a streak plate. • Streak color does not vary like the color of a mineral. • Streak is a good indicator. • Metallic minerals- dense, dark streak. Luster • Used to describe how light is reflected from the surface of a mineral. • Minerals that have an appearance of metal are said to have a metallic luster. (copper) • Nonmetallic minerals can be glassy (quartz), pearly, silky, earthy. • Diamond has a brilliant luster. • Some have sub-metallic luster. Crystal Form • The visible expression of a mineral’s internal arrangement of atoms. • If it formed slowly and with a lot of space it will have well formed faces sides, top and bottom. • Crowding causes lots of small crystals to be formed. – None of them shows its form. Cubic Crystals Hardness • One of the most useful properties. • A measure of the resistance of a mineral to being scratched. • You can rub two minerals together. One will scratch the other. • Mohs scale- consists of 10 minerals arranged from 10 (hardest) to 1 (softest. • • • • Fingernail- 2.5 Penny- 3.5 Glass- 5.5 Quartz- hardest of the minerals 7 • Diamonds- can scratch anything, hardest mineral on Earth • Gypsum (2) can be scratched by your fingernail. • Calcite (3) cannot be scratched by your fingernail. Cleavage • Minerals atomic structure is based on bonds. • Some bonds are weak. • Cleavage is the tendency of a mineral to cleave, or break, along a flat even surface. • Micas- simplest type of cleavage. • Weak bonds, form thin sheets • Silicates- cleave between the silicon-oxygen structure. • Quartz- no clevage, fractures instead. • Halite- 3 directions of clevage, 90 degree angles • Calcite- 3 directions of clevage, 75 degree angles Fracture • Minerals that do not show cleavage when broken are said to fracture. • Fracture is the uneven breakage of a mineral. • Quartz- smooth, curvy, glassy fracture – Called conchoidal fracture • Asbestos breaks into splinters or fibers – Called irregular fracture Density • Density is a property of all matter that is the ratio of any object’s mass to its volume. • D = Mass/Volume • Unit = grams per cubic centimeter (g/cm3) • The density of a pure mineral is a constant value. • Density can be used to determine the purity or identity of some minerals. Distinctive Properties of Minerals • • • • • • • • Some minerals have other distinctive properties. Talc- feels soapy Graphite feels greasy Metallic minerals (gold, silver, copper) are easily shaped. Magnetite can be magnetic Transparent calcite- double refraction Some streaks that contain sulfur smell like rotten eggs. Carbonate minerals (calcite) will fizz when it comes in contact with hydrochloric acid. Rocks • A rock is a solid mass of mineral or mineral-like matter that occurs naturally as part of out planet. • All rocks are composed of minerals. • There are more than 4,000 minerals in Earth’s crust • The three major rock types are: – Igneous – Sedimentary – Metamorphic The Rock Cycle • Old rocks in the rock cycle form new rocks. – The sequence of events in which rocks can be weathered, melted, altered, and formed is described by the rock cycle. – Rock formation occurs very slowly, often over tens of thousands to millions of years. – Depending on the circumstances, any type of rock can become any other type of rock. Alternate Paths • Processes driven by heat from the Earth’s interior are responsible for forming both igneous and metamorphic rocks. • Weathering and the movement of weathered materials are external processes powered by energy from the sun. • External processes produce sedimentary rocks. Formation of Igneous Rocks • Igneous rocks form when magma or lava cools and hardens. • Igneous – Latin- ignismeans fire • If lava cools on the surface it is called basalt. • Different kinds of igneous rocks form when magma and lava cool and harden. Intrusive Igneous Rocks • Rocks the form when magma hardens beneath the Earth’s surface are called intrusive igneous rocks. • They intrude into the existing rocks. • We only see them because of erosion. • Magma is less dense than other rocks, that is why it surfaces. • EX: Granite Extrusive Igneous Rocks • When magma reaches the Earth’s surface it is called lava. • Difference, the gases have escaped from lava. • When lava hardens, the rocks that form are called extrusive rocks. • They are extruded onto the surface. • EX: Rhyolite Classification of Igneous Rocks • Texture and composition are two characteristics used to classify igneous rocks. • Texture- the appearance of an igneous rock based on its size, shape, and arrangement of crystals. • Composition- based on the proportions of light and dark minerals in the rock. 1. Coarse-Grained Texture • The rate of cooling affects the texture. • Slow cooling allows – Few centers of crystal growth development – Ions to move large distances • Slow cooling results in the formation of large crystals. 2. Fine-Grained Texture • Cools quickly • Ions loose motion and quickly combine. • Lots of tiny crystals compete for ions. • Rapid cooling of magma or lava results in rocks with small, interconnected mineral grains. 3. Glassy Texture • EX: Obsidian, pumice • Lava moves too fast for ions to arrange themselves into a network of crystals. No crystals • Made of randomly distributes ions. 4. Porphyritic Texture • Huge amounts of magma deep in the Earth will take thousands of years to harden. • Minerals that crystallize from the magma form at different times. • Phenocrysts- large crystals surrounded by fine grained minerals. • Experienced different rates of cooling. • EX: Andesite 5. Granitic Composition • Made almost entirely of light-colored silicate minerals. (quartz, feldspar) • They also contain about 10 % dark silicate minerals. (biotite, mica) • Contain 70% silica • Major rocks of the crust • EX: Rhyolite- extrusive 6. Basaltic Composition • Contains many dark silicate minerals and plagioclase feldspar. • Rich in magnesium and iron. • Darker and denser than granitic rocks. • EX: Basalt, Gabbro 7. Other Compositional Groups • Composition between granitic and basaltic = andesitic composition. • Named after volcanic rock andesite. • 25% dark silicates • Main mineral- plagioclase feldspar • Ultramafic- composed almost entirely of dark silicate minerals. EX: periotite. • Periotite makes up most of the mantle. Homework • Read Asbestos: What Are the Risks? • Answer the questions • Due tomorrow Sedimentary Rocks • Sedimentary comes from the Latin word sedimentum - “settling” • sedimentary rock: a rock formed from compressed or cemented layers of sediment Formation of Sedimentary Rocks • The remains of older rocks form sedimentary rocks. – All rock breaks down over thousands of years by a process known as weathering. – As pieces of broken down rock accumulate, they can form another type of rock— sedimentary rock. • weathering: the natural process by which atmospheric and environmental agents, such as wind, rain, and temperature changes, disintegrate and decompose rocks 5 major processes involved in the formation of sedimentary rocks 1.Weathering 2.Erosion 3.Deposition 4.Compaction 5.Cementation Weathering • Often the first step in the formation of sedimentary rocks. • Chemical weathering- takes place when the minerals in rocks change into new substances. • Physical forces break rock into smaller pieces. Erosion • Erosion- involved weathering and the removal of rock. • When an agent of erosion – water, wind, ice, or gravity – loses energy, it drops the sediments. – This is called deposition. • Sediments are deposited according to size. – Largest to smallest • Some sediments are so small that they are carried great distances first. Compaction (weight) • After deposition, sediments become lithified- turned into rock. • Compaction is a process that squeezes, or compacts sediments. • Caused by weight of sediments. • Most of the water is driven out Cementation (glue) • Cementation takes place when dissolved minerals are deposited in the tiny spaces among the sediments. • You can see the cement in conglomerate but not in other types. • Conglomerate- made of round pebbles cemented together. (top left) • Sandstone- made of sand grains cemented together. (top right) Classification of Sedimentary Rocks • Sedimentary rocks are named according to the size of fragments that they contain. • Two main groups classified by how they form. • Clastic sedimentary rocks- made of weathered bits of rocks and minerals. • Chemical sedimentary rocks- forms when dissolved minerals precipitate from water solutions. Clastic Sedimentary Rocks • Most common minerals are clay and quartz. – Clay- product of chemical weathering – Quartz- durable, resistant to chemical weathering • Grouped by the size of the sediments in the rock. • • • • Conglomerate- gravel size particles, well rounded Breccia- angular particles Sandstone- most sediments are sand sized grains Shale- most common sedimentary rock – Made of very fine grained sediment • Siltstone- also fine grained Conglomerate Sandstone Breccia Shale Siltstone Chemical/Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks • Forms when dissolved minerals precipitate from water solutions. – Water evaporated or boils off leaving a solid. • Ex: limestones, rock salt, chert, flint, and rock gypsum, chalk, coquina Features of some Sedimentary Rocks • Features of these rocks are clues to how, when, and where the rocks formed. • Each layer records a period of sediment deposition. • Ripple marks- formed along a beach or stream bed. • Fossils- tell whether the rock formed on land or in the ocean, climate, when it formed. Metamorphic Rocks • Rocks that undergo pressure and heating without melting form metamorphic rock. – Heat and pressure within Earth cause changes in the texture and mineral content of rocks. – The word metamorphic comes from the Greek word metamorphosis, which means “to change form.” • metamorphic rock: a rock that forms from other rocks as a result of intense heat, pressure, or chemical processes Formation of Metamorphic Rocks • Most changes occur at elevated temperatures and pressures. • Conditions like this can be found a few kilometers below Earth’s surface and extend into the upper mantle. • There are two settings for metamorphism 1. Contact Metamorphism • During contact metamorphism, hot magma moves into rock. • Considered a low grade metamorphism • Ex: marble • Marble often forms when magma intrudes a limestone body. 2. Regional Metamorphism • Results in large scale deformation and high grade metamorphism. • Mountain building can cause the kind of extreme pressure and temperature. Agents of Metamorphism There are three agents 1. Heat 2. Pressure 3. Hydrothermal solutions • Rocks usually experience all three at the same time. • The effect of each is different. Heat • The most important agent. • Provides energy for chemical reactions. • Reactions – Existing minerals recrystallize – New minerals form • Heat comes from magma and the change in temperature with depth. • 150-200 degrees C – Silicates are stable – Clay minerals recrystallize to form chlorite and muscovite. Pressure (Stress) • Also increases with depth. • Pressure on rocks within the Earth occur in all directions. • Causes the spaces between mineral grains to close. • Results in a more compact rock with greater density. • Increase in temperature and pressure cause rocks to flow rather than fracture. – Mineral grains tend to flatten and elongate • Metamorphic rocks may be changed in two ways. 1. by heat alone 2. by heat and pressure (more common) – The most common types of metamorphic rocks are formed by heat and pressure deep in the crust. – Pressure causes folds in the rocks. Classification of Metamorphic Rocks • Metamorphic rocks are classified by texture and composition. • The texture is either – Foliated- banded appearance – Nonfoliated- contain only one mineral Bellringer # 39 • 1. What is erosion? • 2. How does wind cause erosion? • 3. How does water cause erosion? • 4. How does ice cause erosion?