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MINERALS Reese.

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Presentation on theme: "MINERALS Reese."— Presentation transcript:

1 MINERALS Reese

2 How do they form Minerals form when molten materials cools and hardens inside the Earth or on the surface. Sometimes minerals from when solutions with solutes evaporate.

3 MINERALS Occur naturally and are inorganic solids (not alive).
Have crystalline structure.

4 MINERALS Chemically minerals are elements or compounds.
Example: Gold is an element & a mineral. Example: NaCl is a compound & a mineral.

5 MINERALS Rocks are made up of two or more minerals.
Example: Limestone is a rock made up minerals calcite & aragonite. Rocks can be minerals but not all minerals are rocks. Example: Cu is a mineral but is not a rock

6 MINERALS There are about 3,000 minerals on Earth.

7 BARITE

8 CARBON

9 QUARTZ

10 GRAPHITE

11 Copper

12 FLUORITE

13 MINERAL PROPERTIES

14 LUSTER The way a mineral’s surface reflects light.

15 LUSTER May vary from one sample to another sample of the same substance. Two major types of luster: Metallic Nonmetallic

16 Metallic Luster

17 Nonmetallic luster Earthy Luster Glassy

18 Nonmetallic Pearly Luster

19 COLOR Not very useful for identifying minerals whose color vary with the sample. Example: the colors of minerals quartz & fluorite vary with their samples. Quartz Fluorite

20 COLOR Useful only for those minerals which always have the same color or very unique colors. Example: Malachite– green azurite----- blue

21 SULFUR

22 Malachite

23 Azurite

24 STREAK Color of a mineral in it powdered form.
Can be obtained by rubbing the mineral across a streak plate-- a piece of unglazed porcelain tile. Example: hematite always gives a reddish brown streak no matter what type of luster it displays.

25 Streak Examples Hematite leaves a reddish brown streak.

26 Streak Examples Pyrite leaves a greenish black streak.

27 HARDNESS Ability of a mineral to resist scratching.
It is tested using the Mohs Hardness Scale.

28 Mohs Hardness Scale Based on the fact that a harder mineral will scratch a softer one. Ten minerals are numbered from softest to hardest. Talc is the softest & has a value of 1. Diamond, the hardest of all minerals, has a value of 10.

29

30 DENSITY Useful mineral identification property.
Used to determine the identity and purity of minerals. Pure mineral density is a constant value. Density = mass/volume. Example: gold and pyrite appear similar. Pyrite is often called “fool’s gold”. You can tell the two minerals apart by comparing their densities. Gold’s density: 19.3 g/cc Pyrite’s density: 5.01 g/cc


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