Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67) PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67)

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67) PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67)"— Presentation transcript:

1 PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67) PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67)

2

3

4 Key Concept: A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition. Key Concept: A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a crystal structure and a definite chemical composition.

5 A mineral has all five of the following characteristics. 1. A mineral must be formed by natural processes. For example, a mineral might be formed by the cooling of melted materials. A mineral has all five of the following characteristics. 1. A mineral must be formed by natural processes. For example, a mineral might be formed by the cooling of melted materials.

6 2. A mineral must be inorganic. Something that is inorganic was never part of a living thing. 2. A mineral must be inorganic. Something that is inorganic was never part of a living thing.

7 3. A mineral is always a solid. A mineral is not a liquid or a gas. 3. A mineral is always a solid. A mineral is not a liquid or a gas.

8 4. The particles that make up a mineral always line up in a certain pattern that keeps repeating. 4. The particles that make up a mineral always line up in a certain pattern that keeps repeating. The repeating pattern forms a solid called a crystal. A crystal has flat sides that meet at sharp edges.

9 5. A mineral has a certain “recipe.” For example, the mineral quartz is always made of oxygen and silicon, and there is always twice as much oxygen as silicon.

10 Circle the letter of each sentence that is true about minerals. a. Some minerals are gases. b. Some minerals come from living things. c. All minerals have a definite makeup. Circle the letter of each sentence that is true about minerals. a. Some minerals are gases. b. Some minerals come from living things. c. All minerals have a definite makeup.

11 a. Something that was never part of a living thing is inorganic

12 b. A solid made up of particles in a repeating pattern is a(an) crystal

13 c. A material that is not a liquid or a gas is a solid

14 d. Quartz is an example of a(an) mineral

15 Concept Map inorganic solid

16 Identifying Minerals (pages 68–74) Key Concept: Each mineral has characteristic properties that can be used to identify it. Identifying Minerals (pages 68–74) Key Concept: Each mineral has characteristic properties that can be used to identify it.

17 There are almost 4,000 known minerals. You can tell minerals apart by their properties. You can observe some properties just by looking at minerals. You can observe other properties only by testing minerals.

18

19 Color is a property that is easy to observe. Only a few minerals can be identified by color alone. Malachite is one of them. Malachite is always green, and no other mineral is exactly the same color.

20 The streak of a mineral is the color of its powder. You can see streak by rubbing a mineral against rough tile. The streak color may not be the same as the color of the mineral itself.

21 Luster depends on how a mineral reflects light. A mineral’s luster is described by a word such as shiny, metallic, waxy, dull, or greasy.

22 A mineral’s density is always the same. Remember, density is the amount of mass in a given volume of a substance. Density equals mass divided by volume.

23 Each mineral has a certain hardness. Hardness is measured by scratching a mineral. A mineral can be scratched by any mineral harder than itself. The softest mineral is talc. The hardest mineral is diamond.

24 A mineral’s crystals always have the same shape. For example, a mineral’s crystals might be shaped like cubes.

25

26 Some minerals split easily into flat pieces. These minerals have a property called cleavage. Mica is a mineral with cleavage.

27 Other minerals do not split easily into flat pieces. These minerals have a property called fracture. A mineral with fracture always breaks into pieces with a certain shape. For example, quartz always breaks into pieces shaped like seashells.

28 Some minerals can be identified by special properties. For example, magnetite is magnetic. It attracts iron.

29

30 a.If a mineral does not split easily into flat pieces, it has a property called fracture

31 b.The color of a mineral’s powder is its streak

32 c.How a mineral reflects light is its luster

33 d.If a mineral splits easily into flat pieces, it has a property called cleavage

34 e.The amount of mass in a given volume of a substance is the substance’s e.The amount of mass in a given volume of a substance is the substance’s density

35 f.A property measured by scratching a mineral is hardness

36 a. _____________________________ b. __________________________ Fill in the blanks to label the mineral that has cleavage and the mineral that has fracture. Cleavage Fracture

37

38


Download ppt "PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67) PROPERTIES OF MINERALS What Is a Mineral? (pages 66–67)"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google