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What is a Mineral? Naturally occurring Inorganic Solid Definite crystalline structure Definite chemical composition Mineral characteristics Naturally formed No substance created in a lab can be a mineral. examples: plastic, steel, sugar, paper • Inorganic – Not living • Solid – Liquids and gases are not minerals. examples: water, petroleum, lava, oxygen Mineral characteristics Characteristic crystalline structure must have an ordered arrangement of atoms displays repetitive geometric patterns in 3-D glass not a mineral (no internal crystalline structure) • Definite chemical composition – must have consistent chemical formula examples: gold (Au), quartz (SiO2), orthoclase (KAlSi3O8) basalt (like many other rocks) contains variable ratios of different minerals; thus, has no consistent formula Mineral Structure Crystals: solids with atoms arranged in orderly, repeating patterns. Some crystals form from magma, hot melted rock below the Earth’s surface. When magma cools slowly, crystals are large. When magma cools quickly, crystals are small. Crystals can form from solutions as water evaporates or if too much of a substance is dissolved in water. GRANITE ROCK Minerals are the building blocks of rocks Mineral Structure Contain one or more elements which are made of atoms Most made of compounds of several elements (Quartz SiO2) Mineral composed of one element called native element (Gold Au) Other minerals broken into groups based on chemical composition Types of atoms/molecules that make up mineral and arrangement determine shape of mineral Identifying Minerals Six main properties: Color Luster Streak Cleavage or Fracture Hardness Density/specific gravity Special Properties Identifying Minerals Color: Most obvious, but often misleading Many minerals have same/similar color Different colors may result from impurities Example: Quartz Discuss the following! Can you remember the definition of a mineral? How many properties can you remember? Why isn’t color a very good property to identify most minerals? Identifying Minerals Luster: Metallic example: Galena How a mineral surface reflects light (shines) Two major types: Metallic luster Non-metallic luster Non-metallic example: Orthoclase There are several terms used to describe nonmetallic luster. Examples could be vitreous, like the quartz on the left, or pearly, like the gypsum on the right. Other terms that might be used include greasy, dull, and earthy. Can you tell which of these has an earthy luster and which has a vitreous luster? Vitreous Earth Identifying Minerals Streak: Streak – color of a mineral in powdered form (used for metallic minerals) Obtained by scratching a mineral on a piece of unglazed porcelain. Example: Hematite The streak is often not the same color as the mineral. A minerals color may vary, but the streak rarely will! Identifying Minerals Cleavage vs. Fracture: The way a mineral breaks – Cleavage: tendency of a mineral to break along planes of weakness (smooth) – Minerals that do not exhibit cleavage are said to fracture (uneven) Minerals with cleavage break along smooth, flat surfaces. Physical Properties of Minerals Cleavage (1 direction): Example: mica Physical Properties of Minerals Cleavage (2 directions): orthoclase amphibole Physical Properties of Minerals Cleavage (3 directions): halite calcite Physical Properties of Minerals Cleavage (4 directions): fluorite Physical Properties of Minerals Fracture: minerals that do not exhibit cleavage are said to fracture minerals with fracture break with uneven, rough, or jagged surfaces Identifying Minerals Hardness: How easy it is to scratch a mineral Mohs Scale of Hardness relative scale consists of 10 minerals, ranked 1 (softest) to 10 (hardest) Mohs Scale of Hardness Hardest (10) – Diamond Softest (1) – Talc Common objects: - Fingernail (2.5) - Copper penny (3.5) - Wire nail (4.5) - Glass (5.5) - Streak plate (6.5) Identifying Minerals Specific gravity: weight of a mineral divided by weight of an equal volume of water metallic minerals tend to have higher specific gravity than non-metallic minerals Galena SG=7.5 Quartz SG=2.67 Specific Gravity/Density = Density – how much matter is in something (Density=mass/volume)