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Rocks and Minerals Ch. 1 and 2

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Presentation on theme: "Rocks and Minerals Ch. 1 and 2"— Presentation transcript:

1 Rocks and Minerals Ch. 1 and 2

2 Grouping minerals How can you group the minerals your group has been given? Think of how you group other things in nature: Clouds Trees Birds Buildings

3 What is a mineral? A naturally occurring inorganic solid
with a definite (but not fixed) chemical composition and a highly ordered arrangement

4 Minerals are made from elements
Most common elements: Oxygen Silicon Aluminum Iron Calcium Magnesium Sodium Potassium Percentage by Weight

5 Properties of Minerals
Crystal form Habit Cleavage Hardness Luster Color Streak Density Did you use any of these properties for grouping your minerals?

6 Crystal Form- Internal arrangement of atoms determines outward appearance

7 Habit-shape of a mineral or group of minerals

8 Geode Stalactitic Botryoidal Habit Mammillary Radiating Fibrous

9 Cleavage-preferred plane of weakness
Do all minerals have cleavage?

10 Mohs Hardness Scale 3 4 5 1 2 9 10 6 7 8

11 Mohs Hardness Scale fingernail Copper penny glass Streak plate softest
1 - Talc 2 - Gypsum 3 - Calcite 4 - Fluorite 5 - Apatite 6 - Potassium Feldspar 7 - Quartz 8 - Topaz 9 - Corundum 10 -Diamond fingernail Copper penny glass Streak plate hardest

12 Luster-how a mineral reflects light
Metallic metal like Vitreous - glass like Resinous - resin like Pearly - pearl like Greasy - slippery Non Metallic

13 Luster Metallic Nonmetallic

14 Color-what is the usefulness of this attribute in identifying minerals?

15 Color of Streak

16 Density box of feathers box of hammers

17 Important crustal minerals
Feldspar group (plagioclase and orthoclase) Quartz Calcite and dolomite Pyroxene group Amphibole group (biotite and muscovite) Olivine Halite (salt) gypsum

18 What is a rock? An aggregate of one or more minerals

19 Groups of rocks Igneous Sedimentary Metamorphic
Characterized by how they form Related by the rock cycle

20 Rock Cycle

21 Igneous rocks Crystallize from a molten rock: magma
Magma: liquid rock beneath earth’s surface Lava: liquid rock above earth’s surface Igneous rocks classified on Mineral size composition

22 Igneous rocks Intrusive igneous rocks Extrusive igneous rocks
Cool below ground (slowly) All minerals visible w/out microscope Extrusive igneous rocks Cool above ground (fast) Most minerals too small to see w/out microscope

23 Igneous rocks Intrusive igneous rocks Extrusive igneous rocks

24 Intrusive or extrusive?

25 Slow or fast cooling?

26 Intrusive or extrusive?

27 Slow or fast cooling?

28 Light colored igneous rocks
Granite and rhyolite

29 Intermediate igneous rocks
Andesite

30 Dark colored igneous rocks
Gabbro and basalt

31 Rock Cycle Igneous rocks can become what other kind of rocks?

32 Sedimentary rocks Clastic sed rock: made of solid particles once part of other rocks Classified by grain size Chemical sed rock: made from dissolved material in water Classified by chemical composition Biochemical sed rock: made of dead plants and animals

33 Biochemical, chemical, or detrital?

34 Clastic sed rocks Big particles Conglomerate Sand size Sandstone
Small particles Mudstone (shale)

35 Clastic sed rocks Conglomerate
Clue: Particles of lots of different sizes

36 Clastic sed rocks Sandstone Clue: feels sandy

37 Clastic sed rocks Mudstone (shale) Clue: very small particles
No grit when you taste it

38 Chemical sed rocks Limestone Made of calcite Clues: fizzes with acid
Often contains fossils

39 Chemical sed rocks Rock salt/halite Gypsum Clue: tastes salty
Clue: easily scratched, not salty

40 Biochemical sed rocks Category of chemical sed rocks Coal
Limestone if with fossils

41 Importance of sed rocks
Key to interpreting Earth’s history


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