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Lecture 1 (9/6/2006) – Introduction to Mineralogy

Lecture 1 (9/6/2006) – Introduction to Mineralogy. Mineralogy/Mineral Science . The study of the chemistry, atomic structure, physical properties, and genesis of minerals. Subfields of Mineralogy. Descriptive Mineralogy – documenting physical and optical properties

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Lecture 1 (9/6/2006) – Introduction to Mineralogy

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  1. Lecture 1 (9/6/2006) – Introduction to Mineralogy

  2. Mineralogy/Mineral Science The study of the chemistry, atomic structure, physical properties, and genesis of minerals

  3. Subfields of Mineralogy • Descriptive Mineralogy – documenting physical and optical properties • Crystal Chemistry – relationship of chemical composition to atomic structure • Crystallography – relationship of crystal symmetry and form to atomic structure • Mineral Genesis – interpreting the geologic setting in which a mineral forms from its physical, chemical, and structural attributes and its associated minerals

  4. Fundamental Position of Mineralogy to all other Earth Science Disciplines • Petrology – the study of the origin of rocks is largely determined by evaluating the structure, texture, and chemistry of the minerals they contain. • Geochemistry – study of the chemistry of earth materials which reflects the collective chemistry of the minerals they contain • Structural Geology and Tectonics – Deformation of rocks is controlled by the orientation and crystal structure of its constituent minerals • Environmental Geology/Hydrogeology – the study of how the biosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere interacts with rock and minerals (the lithosphere). • Economic Geology – study of the origin and beneficiation of mineral deposits

  5. Definition A mineral is a naturally occurring solid with a highly ordered atomic arrangement and a definite (but not fixed) chemical composition. It is usually formed by inorganic processes

  6. History of Mineralogy • Mineral “arts” dates back to early human civilization • Mineral science begins with Renaissance/ Age of Reason (Agricola, 1556; Steno 1669) • 1700’s measurements of crystal geometry and symmetry • Early 1800’s precise measurements of crystal symmetry heralds the field of crystallography; analytical chemistry leads to chemical classification of minerals • Late 1800’s – creation of polarizing microscope opens field of petrography and the study of optical properties of minerals

  7. History of Mineralogy (cont.) • Early 1900’s - X-ray diffraction measurements allows for precise measurement of internal symmetry and structure of minerals • 1960 – development of the electron microprobe allows for accurate in situ analysis of mineral chemistry • 1970 – development of transmission electron microscope allow for visualization of atomic structure and symmetry • 1980 – ion microprobe allow for study of isotopic composition of minerals

  8. Economic Importance of Minerals

  9. Classification & Naming of Minerals • classified by major anionic components (oxides, silicates, sulfides, halides, ...) • new minerals – must be accepted by the CNMNMNIMA after careful description of atomic structure and chemical composition • names – few rules (appearance, major chemical attribute, location of discovery, discoverer...) • some local notables – pigeonite, grunerite, hibbingite

  10. Notable Local Minerals • pigeonite • grunerite • hibbingite

  11. Next Lecture • Crystal Chemistry I Composition of the Earth Structure of Atoms Elements and the Periodic Table Ions, Cations, Anions and Valence States • Read p. 38-56

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