EARTH MATERIALS IV Rock-forming minerals: non-silicates Professor Peter Doyle

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Minerals A large nugget. A Cut Diamond Quartz Hexagonal crystals (six sided)
Advertisements

naturally occurring - materials synthesized in laboratory do not count, must be formed by natural processes in wild inorganic - not formed by organic.
Which of the following is not a characteristic of all minerals?
How to Know Minerals Chapter 4 Earth Science Book read pages restate & answer Topic Questions 1-15 practice the 30 lab mineral samples.
WJEC AS Mineral Guide I.G.Kenyon.
Minerals Rocks are composed of minerals,. minerals are composed of ions.
Mineral Groups Section 5.4. Which Elements Make up the Earth’s crust? the top 8.
REVIEW FOR GEOLOGY 141 CHEMISTRY WHIZ SHEET (Follow along on p. 61) If one knows the chemical formula for a particular mineral, with a little help from.
Ch 4. Minerals.
UNIT 2 MINERALS PART 2 full lecture Structure of minerals Composition of magma or fluids from which the minerals form. Conditions like temperature and.
Mineral Groups Reference: Tarbuck and Lutgens Pages Minerals that form the rocks within Earth’s crust belong to seven (7) main mineral groups,
Tim Horner CSUS Geology Department Atoms, Elements, and Minerals Physical Geology 13/e, Chapter 2.
EARTH MATERIALS 2.07 Professor Peter Doyle
Minerals.
MINERALS TYPES OF BONDING INTERMOLECULAR BONDING HYDROGEN BONDING Occurs primarily between water molecules due to polarity. VAN DER WAALS BONDING Occurs.
Minerals. Menu Mineral Definition Most Abundant Elements Classification of Minerals Mineral Identification.
Minerals and Rocks. Lecture Outline What are minerals? What are minerals? Common rock-forming minerals Common rock-forming minerals Physical properties.
Minerals Review.
MINERALS What are they? SAME STUFF? What I think (before) What is a mineral? Are rocks and minerals the same?
Minerals 2 talc. What is a Mineral ? Defining characteristics of minerals: Naturally occurring Inorganic (or at least never alive) Solid Ordered, repetitive.
Atoms, Elements, and Minerals Physical Geology, Chapter 2.
Conversations with the Earth Tom Burbine
Minerals. Mineral – definition (5) __________________.
MINERALS Introduction What Are They?
Classification of Minerals by Anionic Species
EARTH MATERIALS III Rock-forming minerals: silicates Professor Peter Doyle
Atoms Atoms – basic building blocks for all earth materials; consist of 3 basic components: protons, neutrons, electrons Atoms – basic building blocks.
Mineral Groups in the Earth’s Crust Reference: Pages Minerals that form the rocks within Earth’s crust belong to Seven (7) main mineral groups:
Classification of Minerals Native Elements Native Elements – minerals naturally composed of only one element (e.g., diamond, sulfur, gold) Sulfides and.
I. Elements to Symbols In this event, your team must use your knowledge of the periodic table to turn element names into the correct element symbol.
Mineral Groups Common Categories. Two Basic Divisions Silicates Contain Si and O Sialic or Simatic Non Silicates Does not contain Si.
Minerals. Minerals What are they? Uses of … Identification Formation of …. Composition Classification Crystal Systems.
Geology 12 Presents Mineralogy Minerals: 1. Naturally occurring = not man made (but some can be) 2. Inorganic 3. Crystalline solid a) cubic (dice) ex:
Mineral Families and Mineral Resources
List of 10 minerals (groups) you really want to know to be people Quartz, Olivine, Amphibole, Pyroxene, Feldspars, Garnet, Staurolith, Aluminosilicates,
Mineral Samples. #1 Fluorite Luster: Nonmetallic Color: Green and Purple Steak: Clear/White Cleavage Hardness: 4 Nonsilicate: CaF 2.
Minerals. Mineral - definition Naturally occurring Inorganic Solid Specific atomic composition Definite atomic structure.
Mineral - A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered atomic arrangement. naturally occurring.
EARTH MATERIALS EQ:What materials compose the Earth? CLASSROOM UNSQUARED.
Not a Mineral To Determine Whether Something is a Mineral,
Do You Remember?. What element is this? How many P, N, & E?
Atoms, Elements, and Minerals Physical Geology, Chapter 2.
Test May 4 Defining mineral characteristics Identify minerals Match mineral group to property Match mineral to group Rank hardness Multiple choice Open.
Mineral.
Chapter 2 Section 2 Minerals.
What is a mineral? Naturally occurring Naturally occurring Solid substance Solid substance Orderly crystalline structure Orderly crystalline structure.
Mineral Groups Section 5.4. Mineral Groups 1.Describe the characteristics of YOUR mineral: Color, luster, metallic, dark/light, cleavage/fracture… 2.
MINERAL CLASSIFICATION How minerals are grouped. Classification Minerals are generally grouped or classified based on their chemical composition. Most.
MINERAL FAMILIES and RESOURCES
MINERALOGY Some Common Minerals Illustrated by Charina Cameron.
Mineral Classification. There are over 3,000 minerals but only 30 are common. To keep them organized, they are classified into groups based on chemical.
Classification of minerals Systematic classification of minerals is based on the chemical composition of the mineral.
Mineral Groups.
Definition of “Mineral” pg. 32 Minerals are the building blocks of rocks. Must exhibit specific characteristics: 1.Must occur naturally. 2.Must be inorganic.
In the beginning…... your new friends: MINERALS Basic Building Blocks of Rocks.
Warm Up How does the sun play a part in the rock cycle? How does gravity play a part in the rock cycle? How does plate tectonics play a part in the rock.
MINERALS ARE EVERYWHERE. WHAT IS A MINERAL? All Minerals share the following 5 characteristics: Naturally occurring: a mineral forms by natural geologic.
Introduction to Minerals
Mineral - A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered atomic arrangement. naturally occurring.
All in the Mineral Family Chapter 3: Minerals. Elementally Speaking  Most minerals are made of 2 or more elements  8 elements are in greatest abundance.
HCCS-NORTHWEST COLLEGE PHYSICAL GEOLOGY 1403 MINERALS.
Learning Target = Matter & Minerals
Bellringer: -Describe all the differences you can see between these minerals (use mineral characteristics). -What could be different that you cannot.
MAJOR MINERAL SUITES Elements Metallic:Au, Ag, Cu
Minerals Classification.
Mineral Groups.
Minerals & Their Families
An Introduction to Minerals
What is the Earth’s Crust made of?
Presentation transcript:

EARTH MATERIALS IV Rock-forming minerals: non-silicates Professor Peter Doyle

CLASSIFICATION OF MINERALS Mineral classExample SILICATES Olivine (Mg,Fe) 2 SiO 4 CARBONATES Calcite CaCO 3 SULPHATES Anhydrite CaSO 4 OXIDES Hematite Fe 2 O 3 SULPHIDES Pyrite FeS 2 HYDROXIDES Brucite Mg(OH) 2 HALIDES Halite NaCl NATIVE Gold Au

Carbonates Calcite CaCO 3 – trigonalCalcite CaCO 3 – trigonal Aragonite CaCO 3 – orthorhombicAragonite CaCO 3 – orthorhombic Calcite & Aragonite are polymorphs - same composition, different crystal structure Dolomite CaMg (CO 3 ) 2 – trigonalDolomite CaMg (CO 3 ) 2 – trigonal Calcite Calcite & Aragonite stable at different temperatues

CARBONATE MINERALS CALCITE CaCO 3 DOLOMITE CaMg(CO 3 ) 2 Ca Mg Ca Mg Ca

most commonly found in carbonate sediments e.g. limestones Carbonates: most commonly found in carbonate sediments e.g. limestones Modern carbonate sediments may contain aragonite & calcite Ancient carbonates rarely contain aragonite which transforms on burial to calcite

Carbonates in hand specimen Vitreous to pearly lustre Hardness, generally <5 Trigonal carbonates show perfect rhombic cleavage Calcite and aragonite effervesce, readily soluble in cold dilute HCl Dolomite only reacts in hot dilute HCl

Sulphates Gypsum CaSO4.2H 2 O– monoclinicGypsum CaSO4.2H 2 O– monoclinic Anhydrite CaSO 4 – orthorhombicAnhydrite CaSO 4 – orthorhombic Vitreous to pearly lustre Hardness <4 Usually occur in evaporite depositsUsually occur in evaporite deposits Gypsum twin Twin plane

EVAPORITES IN PLAYA LAKE EVAPORITES IN MARINE SALINA

Gypsum in hand specimen Tabular, fibrous, granular,massive (alabaster) habits Often twinned Soft (H = 2) One perfect + 2 good cleavages Gypsum in evaporite deposits

Anhydrite in hand specimen H = Good/perfect intersecting cleavages at right angles Fibrous, granular habits Nodular anhydrite after gypsum in modern arid tidal flat, ( sabkha ) Abu Dhabi, Arabian Gulf Nodular ‘chicken wire’ anhydrite in Permian sediments, UK

Halides Halite NaCl Chloride minerals characterised by salty taste Readily soluble in water H<3 Fluorite CaF 2 Well defined cleavage vitreous lustre H = 4 Variable colours - white streak HALITE FLUORITE

Oxides Hematite Fe 2 O 3 – cubic Magnetite Fe 2 O 4 – cubic Most oxides opaque with metallic lustre Some transparent with vitreous-resinous lustre H >5 Botryoidal hematite Streak - constant

Sulphides Pyrite FeS 2 – cubic Galena PbS – cubic Chalcopyrite Cu FeS 2 – cubic Sphalerite ZnS – cubic Sulphides opaque metallic lustre H ≤6 PYRITE GALENA