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Minerals, Rocks and Fossils What is a mineral? • Naturally occurring • Non-organic • Characteristic chemical composition • Distinctive physical properties • Crystalline structure Mineral properties • Color • Luster • Habit (Shape) • Cleavage & Fracture • Streak • Hardness • Other Color: Not mineral specific Luster: How minerals reflect light Metallic Nonmetallic Mineral Habit (Shape) Shape a mineral takes if grown unimpeded Mineral Java Applet Cleavage & Fracture Cleavage: planes of weakness along which minerals can break Fracture: surfaces along which minerals can break Cleavage & Fracture Best identified on a fracture surface Streak: The powdered form of a mineral Hardness: Based on Moh’s scale of hardness Other Properties • Specific gravity • Reaction to acid • Striations • Magnetism Classifying Rocks • Rocks are classified by how they formed and • • • • what they’re made of There are 3 general classes of rocks Igneous Rocks…are formed when lava and magma crystallize to form solid rock Metamorphic Rocks…are formed when an existing rock is partially melted, squeezed, or both Sedimentary Rocks…are formed when sediments (sand clay, and silt) are compressed and become solid rock Igneous Rocks Metamorphic Rocks Gneiss Schist Sedimentary Rocks Shale Conglomerate Sandstone Fossils The remains or imprints of living things of the past found in Sedimentary rocks. Fossils provide information about life and conditions in the past. Fossils of Sea Creatures • Oceans once covered the area • What part of the ocean Fossils of Plants • Plant fossils can tell us about the ancient environment Animal Fossils • Animal fossils can tell us – About past environments – What the animal ate – How they lived