Minerals Charity I. Mulig. Definition A Mineral is a naturally occurring Inorganic Solid with a...
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MineralsCharity I. Mulig
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Definition
A Mineral is a naturally occurring Inorganic Solid with a definite chemical composition and a crystalline structure.
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How do minerals form?
1. Crystallization from magma
2. Precipitation
3. Pressure and Temperature
4. Hydrothermal solutions
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Properties of Minerals
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Crystalline Structure
The orderly arrangement of ions, molecules, or atoms, in any mineral determines the shape of
its crystals.
Six Basic Crystal Shapes
Cubic
Orthorhombi
c
Tetragonal
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Crystalline Structure
The orderly arrangement of ions, molecules, or atoms, in any mineral determines the shape of
its crystals.
Six Basic Crystal Shapes
Triclinic
Hexagonal
Monoclinic
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Color
• Color is the most easily observed, but least reliable property of a mineral for identification.
• This is because the color of many minerals varies with the kind of impurities in the mineral.
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Luster
Types of Luster
Metallic
Shiny
Glassy
Earthy
is the way in which a mineral shines in the light.
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Streak
• Streak is the color of the powder left on a streak plate when a mineral is rubbed on it.
• Streak is much more reliable than color because, although the color of a mineral changes, its streak does not.
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Cleavage
Cleavage is the tendency of a mineral to split in a particular direction.
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“Sheety” Cleavage
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Fracture
Fracture is the tendency of a mineral to break in directions other than along crystal faces or cleavage surfaces.
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Conchoidal or shell-like fracture
Fibrous facture
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is the resistance of a mineral to being scratched.
The Mohs Hardness Scale is one of the most effective tool for identifying minerals.
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Examples
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Density
• Sometimes equated to specific gravity• Density is a property of all matter that
is the ratio of an object’s mass to its volume while specific gravity is the ratio of an objects density to the density of water.
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Mineral Groups
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Silicates
• Largest group of minerals.• Silicon and oxygen combine to form a structure
called the silicon-oxygen tetrahedron. • Silicates are combinations of metal ions and the
silicon-oxygen tetrahedron.
Examples: Feldspars, Micas, Amphiboles, Pyroxenes, Olivine, Garnets, Kaolin
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Oxygen atom
Silicon atom
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Carbonates
• Made up of ions (usually metallic elements) joined with the carbonate ion (CO3)2− .
Examples:Calcite, Dolomite, Malachite, Azurite, Onix, Alabaster, and Chalk are all examples
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Oxides• Minerals that contain oxygen and one or more
other elements, which are usually metals• Form many of the ores from which valuable
metals are extracted.• Carry the best record of changes of the earth’s
magnetic field.
Examples:Hematite, magnetite, chromite, spinel, ilmenite, rutile and ice.
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Sulfates and SulfidesSulfates Sulfides
•contain the sulfate anion, SO42
•commonly form in evaporitic settings, in hydrothermal vents and during oxidation of sulfide minerals
•Important as metal ores
Examples:anhydrite(calcium sulfate), celestine (strontium sulfate), barite (barium sulfate), gypsum (hydrated calcium sulfate), chromate, molybdate, selenate, sulfite, tellurate, and tungstate minerals.
Examples:pyrite (iron sulfide – commonly known as fools' gold), chalcopyrite (copper iron sulfide),pentlandite(nickel iron sulfide), galena (lead sulfide), the selenides, the tellurides, the arsenides, the antimonides, the bismuthinides, and the sulfosalts (sulfur and a second anion such as arsenic).
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Halides
• Minerals that form the natural salts• Usually form in evaporitic settings• Minerals that contain a halogen ion plus one or
more other elements
Examples:fluoride, chloride, bromide and iodide minerals.
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Native Minerals
• Also known as native elements• Minerals that exist in relatively pure form• Include native metals, intermetallic
elements and alloys
Examples: Gold, silver, copper, antimony, bismuth, graphite, sulfur, phosphides, silicides, nitrides, and carbides.
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Trivia• There are about 4000 different minerals in our
planet. Thirty of which are common and are called rock-forming minerals.
• More than 90% of all of the minerals in the Earth’s Crust are made up of compounds containing Silicon and Oxygen, the two most abundant elements on Earth.
• High silica content rocks are light colored while lower (by about 25%) silica content rocks have darker colors.
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Trivia• Different types of minerals crystallize at
different temperatures (as shown in the Bowen’s Reaction Series).
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Additional Resources• Tarbuck Ph Express Links on Mineralshttp://wps.prenhall.com/esm_tarbuck_escience_11/32/8318/2129653.cw/index.html• Gems and Minerals Photo Gallery
http://nature.berkeley.edu/classes/eps2//wisc/image.html• Glossary of Terms (Gems)http://nature.berkeley.edu/classes/eps2//wisc/glossary.html• Minerals Databasehttp://nature.berkeley.edu/classes/eps2//wisc/glossary2.html• Helpful Tables (on Minerals)http://nature.berkeley.edu/classes/eps2//wisc/tables.html• List of Crystal Structure Movieshttp://nature.berkeley.edu/classes/eps2//wisc/geo360/mov.html