Properties of Minerals. What is a mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. More.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Minerals.
Advertisements

Minerals 6.E.2.3 Explain how the formation of soil is related to the parent rock type and the environment in which it develops.
Properties of Minerals
Section 1: Properties of Minerals
Minerals Text Book Pages :
What is a mineral? Found in nature Inorganic: not made from living things Always in a solid form Has a crystal structure Definite Chemical composition:
Jan. 24, 2014 Goal: Identify the properties of minerals Pick up notes DO NOW: List the elements found in the following substance: (use your periodic table.
Chapter 2: Section1 What Are Minerals? Minerals – a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition.
Minerals.
Minerals Properties of Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and definite chemical.
Minerals.
Minerals Chapter 3 Sec. 1 & 2.
Minerals EQ: How are minerals a part of rocks?. Of the almost 4000 known minerals, only about 30 are common. The most common are quartz, feldspar, mica,
Properties of Minerals
COULTER Properties of minerals. A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a defined chemical composition. For.
Minerals. What is a mineral? 5 Characteristics of a mineral Naturally Occurring Naturally Occurring Inorganic (Not Living) Inorganic (Not Living) Always.
Minerals. A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition.
Minerals CH 2 Prentice Hall p CH 2 Prentice Hall p
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. In.
Warm Up Describe what a mineral is.. inorganic Naturally occurring solid Crystal structure definite chemical make-up Video clip “What is a mineral?’
2.1 Notes Properties of Minerals
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A solid, inorganic, naturally occurring substance. Rocks are made of minerals, but minerals are not made of rocks.
Minerals CH 2 Prentice Hall p. 142 CH 2 Prentice Hall p. 142.
What is a Mineral? A mineral is a naturally formed, inorganic solid that has a definite crystalline structure and chemical composition.
Minerals Characteristics of Minerals. Minerals are… Naturally occurring (not man made) Naturally occurring (not man made) Yes - Diamonds No – Cubic Zirconia.
Minerals A mineral: occurs naturally Is inorganic Is solid
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67) PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67)
Minerals Text Book Pages :
Chapter 3 Minerals Updated November What is a Mineral? Mineral- a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite.
Section 1: Properties of Minerals.  After completing the lesson, students will be able to...  Identify the characteristics of a mineral;  Identify.
MINERALS S6E5.b Investigate the composition of rocks in terms of minerals.
Minerals. Naturally occurring Inorganic Solid Crystal structure Definite chemical composition.
Minerals.
Inorganic Naturally occurring Solid Crystal Form Fixed composition.
What they are, how they form, and how we use ‘em.
2.1 Guided Reading. C. Solid D. Crystal Structure E. Definite chemical composition B. Streak C. Luster E. Hardness F. Crystal systems G. Cleavage & fracture.
COULTER Properties of minerals. A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a defined chemical composition. For.
What is this? Are you sure this is a rock? What else could it be? What tests could you do to determine the type of rock you just picked up?
7th Grade Science Minerals section 3-1.
 Naturally occuring  Solid  Formed by inorganic processes  Have a crystal structure  Definite chemical composition  To be a mineral – MUST HAVE.
Properties of Minerals Chapter 2.1. What is a mineral? For something to be a mineral it must consist of the following: – It must be naturally occurring.
Characteristics of Minerals: A. naturally occurring B. solid C. inorganic D. definite crystal structure E. definite chemical composition.
S olid Cannot be a liquid or a gas N aturally Occurring Found in nature, not man-made I norganic Is not alive and never was, non-living F ixed composition.
Minerals. What is a mineral? A mineral occurs naturally, it’s inorganic, a solid that has crystal structure and definite chemical composition.
Properties of Minerals What is a mineral?. The Rules of the Mineral Every Mineral must follow these set of rules 1. Naturally Occurring 2. Inorganic 3.
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS MRS SANDY GOMEZ. CHARACTERISTICS OF MINERALS  Naturally Occuring: Formed by natural processes in the world.
Properties of Minerals. Vocabulary Mineral: naturally occurring solid formed by inorganic process, has crystal structure, definite chemical composition.
What Are Minerals? Minerals – a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition.
2006 Prentice Hall Science Explorer: Earth Science
Minerals and Mineral Properties
Properties of Minerals
Chapter 4: Section1 What Are Minerals?
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS Chapter 2, Section 1
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
Minerals.
Minerals and rOCKS Chapter 2.
Chapter 2.1 What Are Minerals?
Minerals.
What is a Mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure & a definite chemical composition. Example: Quartz.
Chapter 3 Minerals Updated November 2011.
What is a Mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure & a definite chemical composition. Example: Quartz.
Chapter 3 Section 1: Properties of minerals
Characteristics and Identifications
Mineral Identification
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
What is a Mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure & a definite chemical composition. Example: Quartz.
Unit 2 Rocks and Minerals
What is a mineral? What is a mineral?
Minerals.
POD #1 Mineral Preview What are minerals?
Presentation transcript:

Properties of Minerals

What is a mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. More than 3,000 identified minerals. About 20 minerals make up most of the Earth’s crust.

Characteristics of a mineral 1.Naturally occurring 2.Inorganic 3.Solid 4.Crystal structure 5.Definite Chemical composition.

Naturally Occurring Mineral must occur naturally on Earth –Gold, copper, silver, graphite

Inorganic The mineral cannot arise from materials that were once part of a living thing Coal occurs naturally in the Earth’s crust, but it comes from the remains of plants and animals that lived millions of years ago.

Solid A mineral is always solid, with a definite volume and shape.

Crystal Structure The particles of a mineral line up in a pattern that repeats over and over again. A crystal has flat sides, called faces, that meet at sharp edges.

Definite Chemical Composition A mineral always contains certain elements in definite proportions –For example, the mineral of quartz has one atom of silicon for every two atoms of oxygen.

How do we identify a mineral? Each mineral has its own specific properties that can be used to identify it. 1.Hardness 2.Color 3.Streak 4.Luster 5.Density 6.Breaking

Hardness In 1812, Friedrich Mohs, a mineral expert, invented a test to describe and compare the hardness of minerals. The scale ranks ten minerals from softest to hardest. A mineral can scratch any mineral softer than itself.

Mohs Hardness Scale

Color Color can be used to identify only those few minerals that always have their own characteristic color. –Malachite is always green –Azurite is always blue Many minerals, however, like quartz, can occur in a variety of colors.

Streak A streak test can provide a clue to a minerals identity. The streak of a mineral is the color of its powder. You can observe a streak by rubbing a mineral against a streak plate.

Luster Luster is the way a mineral reflects light from its surface. Minerals containing metals are often shiny. Other minerals, such as quartz, have a glassy luster.

Density No matter what the size of a mineral, the density of that mineral always remains the same. You must determine the mass of the mineral (on a balance) You then place the mineral in water, to see how much it displaces. The volume of the displaced water, equals the volume of the mineral.

Testing Density Rocks mass = 300 ounces Displaces water by 100 cm 3 So volume of rock must be 100 cm 3 D = MU300 V100 D = 100 g/cm 3

Breaking Properties Cleavage Mineral breaks along a flat surface or into sheets Fracture When a mineral breaks with lots of jagged edges

Special Properties that work…. Sometimes… 1. Fluorescence –Fluorescent color under ultraviolet (UV) light 2. Magnetic –Attract magnets 3. Acid reaction –Carbon dioxide gas bubbles off when you drop acid on them –Carbonates!

Fluorescence

Magnetic

Carbonate Acid Reaction