1 / 78

Minerals

Minerals. What is a mineral?. A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid with an orderly crystalline structure and a definite chemical composition. 5 Characteristics of Minerals. 1. Naturally occurring - forms by natural geologic processes, synthetic gems are not considered minerals

barny
Download Presentation

Minerals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Minerals

  2. What is a mineral? • A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid with an orderly crystalline structure and a definite chemical composition

  3. 5 Characteristics of Minerals • 1. Naturally occurring- forms by natural geologic processes, synthetic gems are not considered minerals • 2. Solid Substance- within temperature ranges that occur at Earth’s surface • 3. Orderly crystalline Structure- atoms are arranged in an orderly and repetitive manner • 4. Definite Chemical Composition- minerals are chemical compounds made up of a two or more elements (exception- native elements) • 5. Generally Considered Inorganic- table salt is inorganic, sugar is organic and is not a crystal. Sugar comes from a plant • Calcium carbonate- secreted by marine animals, inorganic or organic?

  4. How do minerals form? • Four major processes by which minerals form • 1. Crystallization from magma • 2. Precipitation • 3. Pressure and Temperature • 4. Hydrothermal Solutions

  5. Crystallization of Magma • Magma is molten rock that occurs deep within the Earth • As magma cools, elements combine to form minerals • First minerals formed are rich in iron, calcium, magnesium • Next are minerals rich in sodium, potassium, and aluminum

  6. Precipitation • Minerals form when water evaporates in lakes, rivers, ponds, and oceans • Minerals are left behind or precipitated from the water • Halite and calcite form this way

  7. Pressure and Temperature • Some minerals from when others are subject to changes in pressure and temperature • Atoms are rearranged to form more compact minerals • Talc and muscovite are formed this way

  8. Hydrothermal Solutions • Hydro (water) thermal (heat) • Very hot mixtures of water and dissolved substances • Can have temperature between 100oC and 300oC • Chemical reactions occur at these temperatures causing minerals to form, or as solution cools minerals form

  9. Mineral Groups • There are over 3800 named minerals on Earth and more are identified each year • Common Minerals are classified into groups based on their composition • Seven mineral groups- • Silicates, carbonates, oxides, sulfates, sulfides, halides, native elements

  10. Silicates • These are the most common- remember from chemistry unit, the most abundant elements in Earth’s crust are oxygen and silicon • Silicon-oxygen tetrahedron- structure which consists of one silicon to four oxygen molecules (most silicates occur in this form) • Most silicate minerals form from crystallization of magma near or far below earth’s surface • Examples include- quartz, augite, micas

  11. Carbonates • Second most abundant mineral group • Contain carbon, oxygen, and one or more other metallic elements • Examples include calcite, dolomite, limestone, marble

  12. Oxides • Oxides contain oxygen and one or more other elements, which are usually metals • Some form under Earth’s surface from crystallization of magma (rutile), others from when minerals are subject to changes in temperature and pressure (corundum), others form when a mineral is exposed to liquid water (hematite, iron oxide)

  13. Sulfates and Sulfides • Both contain sulfur • Sulfates- (anhydrite, and gypsum) form when mineral rich waters evaporate • Sulfides- (galena, sphalerite, pyrite) form from hydrothermal solutions

  14. Halides • This group contains a halogen ion plus one or more other elements • Halogens occur in group 17 (7a) of the periodic table • Examples include- halite and fluorite

  15. Native Elements • This group occurs in pure elemental form • Examples include- gold, silver, copper, sulfur, carbon (graphite and diamonds)

  16. Properties of Minerals and Mineral Identification • Properties of minerals are determined by composition and structure • Color • Streak • Luster • Crystal Form • Hardness • Cleavage • Fracture • Density • Unique properties include- magnetism, double refraction, chemical reactions with HCl

  17. Color and Luster • Color can be unique to some minerals, but for most it is not the most useful for identification • Color within minerals can vary depending on other elements present within the mineral • Luster- how light is reflected from the surface of a mineral • Metallic (metal like), vitreous/glassy (quartz), pearly, silky, earthy

  18. Streak and Crystal Form • Color of a mineral in its powdered form • We can use a streak plate (a sheet of unglazed porcelain) to determine this property • Crystal form- visible expression of internal arrangement of atoms • When a mineral forms without any space restrictions it will develop into a perfect crystal with well developed faces • 6 Crystal Forms

  19. Type 1: Isometric (Cubic) • 6 sides • All sides are square • Examples *pyrite *halite *diamond *galena

  20. Type 2: Tetragonal • 6 sides • 4 rectangles, 2 squares (right angles) • Example *zircon

  21. Type 3: Hexagonal • 8 sides • 2 hexagons, 6 rectangles (right angles) • Examples *ice *quartz *emeralds

  22. Type 4: Orthorhombic • 6 sides • 6 rectangles (3 pairs of rectangles with different sizes at right angles) • Examples *topaz *barite

  23. Type 5: Monoclinic • 6 sides • 4 rectangles, 2 parallelograms (several angles) • Examples *gypsum *muscovite

  24. Type 6: Triclinic • 6 sides • Parallelograms (no right angles) • Example *turquoise

  25. Mineral with a Cubic or Isometric Crystal Shape • Pyrite has a Cubic Crystal Structure

  26. Mineral with a Tetragonal Crystal Shape • Rutile has a Tetragonal Crystal Structure

  27. Mineral with a Hexagonal Crystal Shape • Ruby has a Hexagonal Crystal Structure

  28. Minerals with Orthorhombic Crystal Shapes • The is a very big crystal system containing gemstones such as topaz, peridot, tanzanite, and many others

  29. Mineral with a Monoclinic Crystal Shape • Gypsum is a mineral with a Monoclinic Crystal Structure

  30. Mineral with a Triclinic Crystal Shape • Calcite- Triclinic crystal look like a rectangular box that someone pushed from one side to make it lean

  31. Hardness • One of the more useful properties for identification • Done by rubbing two minerals together, one will scratch the other unless they have the same hardness • Mohs Hardness Scale- 1-10 • Talc is the softest, what is hardest?

  32. Moh’s Hardness Scale

  33. Cleavage and Fracture • Cleavage is the tendency of a mineral to cleave or break along flat, even surfaces • Fracture is what happens to all other minerals that do not display cleavage • Fracture can be described as the uneven breakage of a mineral • Internal atomic structure determines whether a mineral will display cleavage or fracture

  34. Fracture or Cleavage? Selena

  35. Density • Ratio of an objects mass to its volume • D= M/V • For minerals we would use g/cm3, since we are looking at solids • Density of pure minerals are of constant value. Therefore we can use density to identify pure minerals or to tell if a mineral is not in pure form.

  36. Other Properties • Magnetism- some types of magnetite are magnetic and can be used to pick of metal objects • Double Refraction- When calcite is placed over printed words the letters appear doubled • Chemical Reactions with HCl- Carbonate minerals will fizz when they come into contact with hydrochloric acid

  37. Double Refraction of Calcite

  38. Magnetism

More Related