1 / 31

Chapter 3: Matter and Minerals (part II)

Chapter 3: Matter and Minerals (part II). Minerals: the building blocks of rocks. Definition of a Mineral: naturally occurring inorganic solid characteristic crystalline structure definite chemical composition. How do we identify minerals?. Physical properties: Color Luster

leann
Download Presentation

Chapter 3: Matter and Minerals (part II)

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. Chapter 3: Matter and Minerals (part II)

  2. Minerals: the building blocks of rocks • Definition of a Mineral: • naturally occurring • inorganic • solid • characteristic crystalline structure • definite chemical composition

  3. How do we identify minerals? • Physical properties: • Color • Luster • Hardness • Crystal shape • Cleavage • Specific gravity • Other

  4. Physical Properties of Minerals • Color: • Most obvious, but often misleading • Different colors may result from impurities Example: Quartz

  5. Physical Properties of Minerals • Color: 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

  6. Physical Properties of Minerals • Luster: • How a mineral surface reflects light • Two major types: • Metallic luster • Non-metallic luster Metallic example: Galena Non-metallic example: Orthoclase

  7. Physical Properties of 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)

  8. 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) Mohs Scale of Hardness

  9. Physical Properties of Minerals • Crystal shape (or form): • external expression of a mineral’s internal atomic structure • planar surfaces are called crystal faces • angles between crystal faces are constant for any particular mineral Pyrite Quartz

  10. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage vs. Fracture: • The way a mineral breaks • Cleavage: tendency of a mineral to break along planes of weakness • Minerals that do not exhibit cleavage are said to fracture • Do not confuse cleavage planes with crystal faces! Crystal faces are just on the surface and may not repeat when the mineral is broken.

  11. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage is described by: • Number of planes • Angles between adjacent planes • These are constant for a particular mineral

  12. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage (1 direction): Example: mica

  13. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage (2 directions): orthoclase amphibole

  14. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage (3 directions): halite calcite

  15. Physical Properties of Minerals • Cleavage (4 directions): fluorite

  16. Physical Properties of Minerals • Fracture: • minerals that do not exhibit cleavage are said to fracture • smooth, curved surfaces when minerals break in a glass-like manner: conchoidal fracture Quartz

  17. Physical Properties of 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

  18. Physical Properties of Minerals • Other properties: • reaction with hydrochloric acid(calcite fizzes) • taste(halite tastes salty) • feel(talc feels soapy, graphite feels greasy) • magnetism(magnetite attracts a magnet)

  19. Mineral Groups • Rock-forming minerals • ~30 common minerals make up most rocks in Earth’s crust • Composed mainly of the 8 elements that make up over 98% of the crust

  20. Mineral Groups Element Abundances Silica (SiO4)4- SILICATES Common cations that bond with silica anions All others: 1.5%

  21. Mineral Groups • Silicates (most abundant) • Non-silicates (~8% of Earth’s crust): • Oxides O2- • Carbonates (CO3)2- • Sulfides S2- • Sulfates (SO4)2- • Halides Cl-, F-, Br- • Native elements (single elements; e.g., Au)

  22. Mineral Groups – Silicates Silicon-oxygen tetrahedron (SiO4)4- • Silicates • Tetrahedron • fundamental building block • 4 oxygen ions surrounding a much smaller silicon ion

  23. Mineral Groups – Silicates • Joining Silicate Structures • How tetrahedra may be linked: • independent tetrahedra • single chains • double chains • sheets • 3-D framework

  24. Mineral Groups– Silicates –

  25. Mineral Groups – Silicates Olivine Group dark silicates (Fe-Mg)  ferromagnesian No cleavage

  26. Mineral Groups – Silicates Pyroxene Group Ferromagnesian / dark silicates (Fe-Mg) Augite 2-directions of cleavage (at nearly 90 degrees)

  27. Mineral Groups – Silicates Amphibole Group Ferromagnesian / dark silicates (Ca, Fe-Mg) Hornblende 2-directions of cleavage (not at 90 degrees)

  28. Mineral Groups – Silicates Mica Group and Clay Minerals light silicates (K, Al)  non-ferromagnesian Muscovite 1-direction of cleavage

  29. Mineral Groups – Silicates Feldspar Group light silicates (K-Na-Ca, Al) K-feldspar Most common mineral group Orthoclase Plagioclase 2-directions of cleavage (at 90 degrees) Ca/Na-feldspar

  30. Mineral Groups – Silicates Quartz light silicates (pure SiO2) no cleavage (conchoidal fracture) hard, resistant to weathering Quartz

  31. Mineral Groups Non-ferromagnesian Silicates (K, Na, Ca, Al) Ferromagnesian Silicates (Fe, Mg) Oxides Carbonates Sulfides/sulfates Native elements

More Related