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Introduction to Minerals
Aim: What are minerals?
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Do Now: Why do we take our vitamins and minerals instead of vitamins and rocks?
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I. What’s the difference?
Mineral- a pure substance, found on the earth that occurs in nature, that is inorganic (non-living), and homogeneous (uniform). Rock- is a substance that is or was a natural part of the solid earth.
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II. Testing Minerals Cleavage- refers to the tendency of some minerals to break along smooth, flat planes. 1. Fracture- (opposite of cleavage) when minerals break and don’t have a defined shape, the atomic arrangement of atoms is not in a regular pattern.
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Properties Continued Color- some minerals have their own unique color
Sulfur=yellow Olivine=green Garnet=red
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Why do you think it is not good to only use color?
Different minerals may have the same color. Talc Gypsum Quartz Calcite
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These are all the mineral Calcite.
One mineral can come in many colors.
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Properties Continued…
C. Streak Test- color of the powder left behind on a streak plate (ceramic plate)
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Streak Continued Pyrite with its green-black streak Hematite with its red-brown streak
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Properties Continued…
D. Luster- how light reflects off the mineral. There are two main types of luster: Metallic- Non-Metallic- Looks like metal Doesn’t look like a (ex. Tinfoil) metal.
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Properties Continued…
E. Moh’s Hardness Scale- resistance to being scratched. Hardness depends on how tightly packed the molecules are in the mineral. Scale of 1-10, 10 (Diamond) is the hardest.
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Loose arrangement of atoms= Soft Mineral
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Tight arrangement of atoms=Hard Mineral
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Properties Continued…
F. Hydrochloric (HCL) Acid Test- when HCL is applied to calcite it will fizz on contact. HCl
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The only mineral in a solid rock form, that has this characteristic is calcite.
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HCL on Calcite HCL on Calcite
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