The material met all the criteria required to be called a mineral.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 4 - Minerals.
Advertisements

Properties of Minerals
Mineral Notes Mineral = a naturally formed solid substance with a crystal structure, which was not formed from living things. Crystal structure = a definite.
Minerals.
FIRST LESSON IN GEOLOGY Minerals and Mineral Identification.
Chapter 3 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. What is a Mineral? A mineral is inorganic. Minerals are naturally occurring. Minerals are solids. Minerals have a crystal structure. Minerals.
TOPIC 11 Minerals, Rocks and Mineral Resources
Earth’s Materials.
Properties of Minerals
Minerals.
Minerals. What is a mineral? 5 Characteristics of a mineral Naturally Occurring Naturally Occurring Inorganic (Not Living) Inorganic (Not Living) Always.
Minerals CH 2 Prentice Hall p CH 2 Prentice Hall p
Minerals. What are minerals?  Naturally occurring  Inorganic  Solid  Specific chemical compositions  Made up of specific compounds or elements 
Minerals. Definition: A mineral is naturally occurring Made by Mother Nature -it is NOT man made!
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 The building blocks of rocks…..
Minerals A mineral: occurs naturally Is inorganic Is solid
Section 1: Properties of Minerals.  After completing the lesson, students will be able to...  Identify the characteristics of a mineral;  Identify.
Minerals. A mineral is an element or compound found in the earth. The 5 basic features all minerals have 1.They are solid 2.They are formed naturally.
Properties of Minerals. What is a mineral? A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. More.
Minerals.
What they are, how they form, and how we use ‘em.
*What is a Mineral?*  Naturally occurring  Inorganic  Solid  Definite crystalline structure * = Most Important information.
Mineral Jeopardy!. Mineral Jeopardy! What is a Mineral? Formation I D Mining & Uses BLT Chemistry
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.
Minerals.
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?
Minerals. What is a Mineral? A mineral is inorganic. Minerals are naturally occurring. Minerals are solids. Minerals have a crystal structure. Minerals.
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.
Chapter 1: Minerals of the Earth’s Crust. A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a definite chemical composition and a crystal structure.
Minerals. What is a mineral? A naturally formed, inorganic solid with a definite chemical composition and crystalline structure.
Chapter Four Chemical Bonding. Lesson 4-1 Ionic Bonds.
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS MRS SANDY GOMEZ. CHARACTERISTICS OF MINERALS  Naturally Occuring: Formed by natural processes in the world.
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.
Aim Aim: What are the characteristics of minerals and how do we identify them? Minerals I. Minerals A. 4 Characteristics 1. Naturally occurring 2. solid.
Science 8—Chapter 13-Quiz
Minerals and Mineral Properties
Properties of Minerals
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS Chapter 2, Section 1
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
Minerals Naturally occurring Inorganic= not from living materials.
Minerals S6E5. Students will investigate the scientific view of how the earth’s surface is formed. B. Investigate the contribution of minerals to rock.
What is a Mineral? 6th Grade Science.
Vocabulary Chapter 2: Lesson 1
Earth Materials.
NOTES Chapter 3 Section 1 & 2
Chapter 2.1 What Are Minerals?
Minerals.
Mineral Properties.
Characteristics of Minerals
Minerals Objective(s):
Chapter 3 Section 1: Properties of minerals
Chapter 4 - Minerals.
Minerals S6E5. Students will investigate the scientific view of how the earth’s surface is formed. B. Investigate the contribution of minerals to rock.
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
Chapter 2, Lesson 2, Minerals and Rocks
What are rocks made of? minerals.
Unit 2 Rocks and Minerals
Minerals and Their Properties
Minerals S6E5. Students will investigate the scientific view of how the earth’s surface is formed. B. Investigate the contribution of minerals to rock.
What is a mineral? What is a mineral?
Minerals and Rocks Chapter 8.
Minerals.
Minerals & Their Properties
Minerals and Their Properties
Presentation transcript:

The material met all the criteria required to be called a mineral.

The substance was said to be inorganic.

The item was actually proven to be an element on the Periodic Table.

Water which is indicated by the symbol H 2 O is considered a compound.

Sodium chloride (NaCl) has a crystal structure.

Opal has a luster that is considered greasy.

Green fluorite has prominent cleavage.

When native copper is torn, it results in what is referred to as hackly fracture.

One can tell that pyrite is not gold, because it leaves a black streak.

Galena is Lead ore.

According to Mohs hardness scale, diamond is the hardest solid to be tested.

Now it’s your turn, you will have 3 minutes to discuss this will your group, starting NOW.

Mineral: A naturally occurring, inorganic, solid that has a crystal structure, and a definite Chemical composition.

Inorganic: Not formed from living things or remains of living things.

Element: A substance composed of a single kind of atom.

Compound: A substance in which two or more elements are chemically joined.

Crystal: A solid in which the atoms are arranged in a pattern that repeats again and again.

Luster: The way a mineral reflects light from its surface.

Cleavage: A mineral’s ability to split along a flat surface.

Fracture: The way a mineral looks when it breaks apart in an irregular way.

Mohs Hardness Scale: A scale ranking ten minerals from softest to hardest; used in testing the hardness of minerals.

Ore: Rock that contain a metal or economically useful mineral.

Streak: The color of a mineral’s powder.