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III. Atoms, Elements and Minerals A. Changing scales to looking at the elements of the earth and its crust (8 most common) B. Introduction to minerals that comprise rocks (11 most common) C. The silicate minerals (7) D. Other important rock-forming minerals (4) E. Mineral properties A. Changing Scale: Zooming in from global view to atomic scale Quartz Biotite Feldspar The crust is made of rocks > Rocks are made of minerals > … A. Changing Scale: Zooming in from global view to atomic scale Rocks are made of minerals > Minerals are made of atoms Atoms and Elements Nucleus Protons Neutrons + Charge Has Mass, Atomic # 0 Charge Mass same as One Proton Atomic Mass # Electrons In shells (2, 8, 8…) - charge (balances each proton +) Very little Mass Electron Shells Ions Incomplete electron shells tend to be filled E.g. Chlorine (Cl-) 17 protons (at.# 17) 17 electrons would make it neutral (no charge) with the last shell one electron short {2, 8, 7} Soooo… Tends to grab an electron to fill the third shell Making it a negatively charged Ion (anion) Ions Other Common Examples Sodium Sodium, at.# 11 {2, 8, 1} Na+ (Cation) Oxygen, at.# 8 {2,6}, O-2 Silicon, at.# 14 {2,8,4} Si+4 Oxygen Most Common Elements of Earth’s Crust Oxygen: Silicon: Aluminum: Iron: O-2 Si+4 Al+3 Fe+2 or +3 Calcium: Ca+2 Sodium: Na+1 Potassium: K+1 Magnesium: Mg+2 B. Introduction to Minerals Halite (Rock Salt) Mineral mined for rock salt and table salt Na gives electron to Cl Opposites attract, elements bond NaCl (Sodium Chloride) Intro to Minerals Repeating 3-D pattern forms a Crystalline Solid (or Crystal) Naturally occurring Crystal Form crystals are Minerals Crystalline structure and bonding leads to physical properties: hardness, crystal form, cleavage specific gravity (density) (pg. 38-43) 3 planes of cleavage Some Familiar Crystal Forms Quartz Crystal (SiO2) Fig. 2.15a Snow Flake (Ice Crystal) due to crystalline structure of H2O Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 Silica Tetrahedra The building block of most common rock forming minerals Four O2- in a tetrahedral configuration One Si4+ nested in the center (4 -2) +4 = -4 (SiO4)-4 -4 C. Silica Tetrahedra and Silicate Minerals Si and O bond in a tetrahedron shape The basic building block of most minerals of the crust Bond with other tetrahedra and cations to form Silicate Minerals Definition of Mineral Naturally Occurring Crystalline Solid With a definite chemical composition A unique composition or A definite range of compositions Mineral Group, e.g. Olivine Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Olivine Isolated silicate structure (SiO4)-4 + 2×Fe+2 Fe2SiO4 Fe Mg SiO4 Mg2SiO4 Definite Range (Fe,Mg) 2 SiO4 Olivine Mineral Group Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Olivine Isolated silicate structure bonded with Fe and/or Mg Makes up much of Earth’s mantle Fe/Mg rich (Ferromagnesian mineral) 2/7 = 0.29 = 29% Silica poor 1/7 = 0.14 = 14% % of all atoms Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Pyroxenes (Mineral Group) Single Chain Silicate structure (SiO3)-2 + Fe+2 FeSiO3 (Fe,Mg) SiO3 MgSiO3 (Fe,Mg) SiO3 Pyroxene Mineral Group Ferromagnesian Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Pyroxenes (Group of minerals) Single Chain Silicate structure bonded with Fe, Mg, Ca, and Al Found in Oceanic Crust Fe/Mg/Ca rich (20%) Silica poor (<20%) Single Chain Silicates E.g., Pyroxenes (SiO3) Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Amphiboles (Group of minerals) Double Chain Silicate structure bonded with Fe, Mg, Ca, and Al Found in Continental Crust More silica and less iron than pyroxenes Double Chain Silicates E.g., Amphiboles (Si8O22) Silicate Minerals: Examples E.g., Micas (Muscovite and Biotite) Sheet Silicate structure bonded with Al, K, (biotite has Fe, Mg) Found in Continental Crust More silica and less iron than Amphiboles Sheet Silicates E.g., Micas (Biotite and Muscovite) (AlSi3O10) Common Framework Silicates Feldspar Group The most common minerals in the crust of the earth Oceanic Crust: Ca Plagioclase (dark) Continental Crust: K feldspar (pink) and Na Plagioclase (white) Quartz Pure Silica SiO2 Stable under many conditions Not easily weathered Melts at a low temperature Continental Crust and Sediments Framework Silicates E.g., Quartz (SiO2) and Feldspars (AlSi3O8) Framework Silicates E.g., Quartz (SiO2) and Feldspar (AlSi3O10) % of Tot. # of atoms Fe/Mg: Silicon: Olivine 29% 14% Systematic Silicate Mineralogy Pyroxene Fig. 2.9 <20% Group From bottom to top Decreasing Silica Increasing Fe/Mg/Ca Increasing Density Amphibole Group <3% Increasing Fe/Mg/Ca Decreasing silica Mica <2% Group Increasing density Darker minerals Quartz K and Na Feldspar Ca Feldspar (0) (0) (0) 20% 23% 25% 33% 23% 15%* Other Important Fig. 2.22 Rock-Forming Minerals Sediments and Sedimentary Rocks Quartz: resistant to alteration by weathering Feldspar: moderately resistant to weathering Clay: most other silicates weather to clay Carbonates (non-silicates): Deposited in shallow tropical seas be shellfish and coral Calcite: CaCO3 Dolomite: CaMgCO3 Halite: Deposited by evaporating seas Important Economic Minerals Fig. 2.13 Elements: Diamond, Graphite, Gold, Copper Sulfur Iron Oxides: Hematite (Fe2O3), Magnetite (Fe3O4) Fig. 21.1 E. Physical Properties Fig. 2.20 Cleavage Pyroxene Amphibole Mica Quartz Halite Calcite 2 planes, splinters Crystal Form Prismatic (Needles) Hardness 6 (File) Fig. 2.19a E. Physical Properties Cleavage Pyroxene Amphibole Mica Quartz Halite Calcite 2 planes, splinters 1 plane Crystal Form Prismatic (Needles) Plates Hardness 6 (File) 2 (fingernail) Fig. 2.15a E. Physical Properties Cleavage Pyroxene Amphibole Mica 2 planes, splinters 1 plane Crystal Form Prismatic (Needles) Plates Quartz None Columnar Halite Calcite Hardness 7 6 (File) 2 (fingernail) E. Physical Properties Cleavage Pyroxene Amphibole Mica 2 planes, splinters 1 plane Crystal Form Prismatic (Needles) Plates Hardness Quartz None Columnar 7 Halite Calcite 3 planes Cubes Rhombs 2½ 3 (Penny) Fig. 2.15a 6 (File) 2 (fingernail)