Minerals and Mineral Identification By Mr. King. What is a mineral? Inorganic Inorganic Naturally occurring Naturally occurring Crystalline structure.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 4 - Minerals.
Advertisements

Mineral Identification Identifying Minerals: Minerals have chemical and physical properties that are unique to each mineral Physical Properties Color.
Minerals Mr. Skirbst Earth Science Topic 22. Minerals Naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a definite chemical composition and crystal structure.
(How can we identify which mineral is which?)
Review 1. What are the two mineral groups?1. What are the two mineral groups? 2. What does chemical composition mean?2. What does chemical composition.
Earth’s Materials.
Mineral Identification Mr. Jensen Ref: McGuire – ES/PS.
Minerals. What is a mineral? 5 Characteristics of a mineral Naturally Occurring Naturally Occurring Inorganic (Not Living) Inorganic (Not Living) Always.
Mineral Identification. Identify A Mineral Physical Properties Hardness How easily it can be scratched Mohs Scale Luster Way it reflects light Metallic.
CHUNKY MINERALS. 5 PARTS TO THE DEFINITION OF A MINERAL 1. Not man made Answer: Naturally occurring.
Lab 4 - Minerals Minerals 1. Inorganic 2. Naturally occurring 3.Have characteristic chemical composition - Crystalline structure (orderly 3D arrangement.
Minerals. What are minerals?  Naturally occurring  Inorganic  Solid  Specific chemical compositions  Made up of specific compounds or elements 
2.1 Notes Properties of Minerals
What is a Mineral?. What is a mineral? Minerals are naturally occurring, solid, inorganic compounds or elements.
Minerals 1. Natural 2. Solid 3. Inorganic 4
Warm Up Minerals that are silicates contain ___________ and ____________. **Turn in your mineral vocabulary to the HW box!!***
Earth’s Buried Treasures An Introduction to Mineral Identification Earth Science.
 Protons, Electrons and Neutrons make up atoms  Element is a substance composed of a single kind of atom  Minerals are made from one or more elements.
Minerals, Rocks, and Mineral Resources
Introduction to Physical Science Monday, Wednesday, Thursday Tom Burbine
What they are, how they form, and how we use ‘em.
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils. What is a mineral? Naturally occurring Naturally occurring Non-organic Non-organic Characteristic chemical composition Characteristic.
Earth Science With Mr. Thomas Minerals All rocks & minerals on earth are made of elements. How is a rock different than an mineral? Rocks are made of.
DEFINITION OF MINERAL Naturally occurring, Inorganic Solid with a definable chemical composition and crystal structure Physical Properties Crystal Form.
Minerals. 4 requirements to be considered a mineral: 1. Naturally Occurring (not manmade)
7th Grade Science Minerals section 3-1.
Identifying Minerals Chapter 3.
Minerals.
Chapter 3 Section 2.  Color  Luster  Streak  Cleavage & Fracture  Hardness  Density  Special Properties.
Based upon Physical properties.  A solid that has a structure arranged in orderly fixed patterns.
Composition and Structure of Minerals.  It occurs naturally  It is a solid  It has a definite chemical composition  Its atoms are arranged in an orderly.
Physical Geology Laboratory Tuesday Tom Burbine
Minerals. What is a mineral? A naturally formed, inorganic solid with a definite chemical composition and crystalline structure.
 Labs 1 & 2 due TODAY  Check your blackboard for syllabus.  Will have office hours scheduled Wednesday morning!
Minerals Naturally formed Solid Inorganic
Ms. Hartnett's Earth Science1 Minerals A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid with distinct physical and chemical properties. Facts about.
Minerals Mineral Mineral Formation A naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure. – Naturally formed – not made by people.
DEFINITION OF MINERAL Naturally occurring, Inorganic Solid with a definable chemical composition and crystal structure Physical Properties Crystal Form.
Mineral Properties.
Science 8—Chapter 13-Quiz
Introduction to Minerals
MINERALS Chapter 5 Review.
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Chapter 2: Properties of Minerals (2.3)
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
How could you tell these minerals apart to determine which is which?
Mineral Properties.
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Describe in as much detail the mineral on your table!!!
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Chapter 3 Section 1: Properties of minerals
Minerals: Building Blocks of Rocks
Chapter 4 - Minerals.
Identifying Minerals Color Streak Luster Density Hardness
DEFINITION OF MINERAL Naturally occurring, Inorganic Solid with a
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Minerals Mr. Q/Mrs. Wolfe.
Minerals.
What are rocks made of? minerals.
Minerals & Rocks.
Minerals What are minerals?
Minerals Naturally-occurring, inorganic solid with definite physical and chemical properties.
Minerals & Rocks.
Minerals & Rocks.
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Minerals.
Minerals, Rocks and Fossils
Earth Science Chapter 4 Section 1
Mineral Identification
Presentation transcript:

Minerals and Mineral Identification By Mr. King

What is a mineral? Inorganic Inorganic Naturally occurring Naturally occurring Crystalline structure Crystalline structure Chemical composition Chemical composition Distinct physical properties Distinct physical properties

Mineral properties Color Color Luster Luster Habit (Shape) Habit (Shape) Cleavage & Fracture Cleavage & Fracture Streak Streak Hardness Hardness Other Other

Color: Not mineral specific

Luster: How minerals reflect light Non- metallic Metallic

Mineral Habit (Shape) Shape a mineral takes if grown unimpeded

Cleavage Cleavage is the breakage along planes that cut across weak bonds, thus cleavage in controlled by the minerals atomic structure EG: rhombohedral calcite

Fracture Fractures occur in minerals whose bond strengths are the same in all directions thus breakage doesnt follow a crystallographic direction, but follows an irregular surface. EG: conchodial fracture in quartz

Cleavage

There is a visual difference between the cleavage and fracture in a mineral... Just wait

Streak: The powdered form of a mineral

Other Properties Specific gravity Specific gravity Reaction to acid Reaction to acid Striations Striations Magnetism Magnetism Fluorescence Fluorescence