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Mineral - A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered atomic arrangement. naturally occurring.

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Presentation on theme: "Mineral - A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered atomic arrangement. naturally occurring."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Mineral - A naturally occurring, inorganic, homogeneous solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered atomic arrangement. naturally occurring - materials synthesized in laboratory do not count, must be formed by natural processes in wild inorganic - not formed by organic chemistry (e.g., sugars, etc.) homogeneous solid - single substance in solid phase which cannot be physically separated into simpler compounds definite chemical composition - composition can be represented as chemical formula (e.g., NaCl), although variation in exact composition is possible (e.g., (Mg, Fe)2SiO4 ) [range in color, hardness, specific gravity] ordered atomic arrangement – repeating structure at the atomic level, which expresses as symmetry in large specimens, i.e., crystalline structure.

3 COLOR Quartz SiO2 Hardness = 7 Rose Quartz Smokey Citrine Amethyst
Carnelian Onyx Jasper

4 CRYSTAL FORM Figure 3.4

5 Good for metallic and opaque minerals, softer than the streakplate
Figure 3.7 Good for metallic and opaque minerals, softer than the streakplate

6 HARDNESS Figure 3.9

7 HARDNESS Figure 3.8

8 metallic Luster - quality of light reflected from mineral surface
pyrite metallic silver gold

9 non-metallic vitreous (glassy) pearly resinous Luster
quality of light reflected from mineral surface non-metallic Some minerals may be listed in both metallic and non-metallic, or in the incorrect table, i.e., limonite vitreous (glassy) pearly resinous

10 CLEAVAGE Cleavage: Breaks along planes of weakness
See the way light reflects back at you (I cannot see this for you). Rotate the mineral to “find” reflective surfaces. When you find a cleavage plane, rotate Figure 3.10

11 CLEAVAGE Figure 3.10a

12 CLEAVAGE Figure 3.10b

13 CLEAVAGE Figure 3.10c

14 CLEAVAGE Figure 3.10d

15 Figure 3.12

16 NO CLEAVAGE - FRACTURE Figure 3.12a

17 CLEAVAGE – 1 PLANE, EXCELLENT
Figure 3.12b

18 Figure 3.13

19 CLEAVAGE – 2 PLANES, GOOD Figure 3.12c

20 Figure 3.15

21 Figure 3.12d

22 Figure 3.14

23 Figure 3.14a

24 Figure 3.14b

25 CLEAVAGE – 3 PLANES, GOOD Figure 3.12e

26 CLEAVAGE – 3 PLANES, GOOD Figure 3.12f

27 CLEAVAGE – 4 PLANES, GOOD Figure 3.12g

28 CLEAVAGE – 6 PLANES, GOOD Figure 3.12h

29 EFFERVESCENCE Minerals like calcite react with weak acid, dissolving the mineral and producing lots of bubbles (effervescence) Calcite: CaCO3 HCl + CaCO3 > H2O + Cl- + Ca+ + CO2 Dolomite: CaMg(CO3)2

30 SPECIFIC GRAVITY Mass / Volume (gm/cm3) Orthorhombic Carbonates
All minerals have same structure, only cation differs Mineral Formula Cation g/cm3 Aragonite CaCO Strontianite SrCO Witherite BaCO Cerrusite PbCO Figure 3.17

31 PAGE 90 Figure 3.18

32 PAGE 91 Figure 3.18

33 PAGE 93 Figure 3.21a

34 UnFigure Pg101_1

35 ONE QUARTZ CRYSTAL, DOUBLY TERMINATED
UnFigure Pg101_1b

36 MULTIPLE CRYSTALS: Galena, Flourite
UnFigure Pg101_1c

37 Look at minerals: Galena, Olivine
IGNEOUS ROCK, Granite, with quartz, potassium feldspar, plagioclase, biotite Randomly Oriented. Look at minerals: Galena, Olivine UnFigure Pg101_1d


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