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Chapter 27 Minerals and the Environment
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What is a Mineral? A substance formed by geological processes Nonrenewable Availability determines standard of living (Rock – aggregate of one or more minerals)
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How Mineral Deposits Are Formed Ore Deposits – formed when metals are concentrated in unusually high amounts by geological processes Mineral resources are usually extracted from ore deposits Plate Boundaries – metals are precipitated and carried to the surface –Hg
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How Mineral Deposits Are Formed Igneous Process – magma cools and then crystallizes –Diamonds Sedimentary Process – wind, water, and glaciers; sorting process –Sand and gravel Steam process sort heavy metals –Gold
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How Mineral Deposits Are Formed Evaporation – minerals fall out as a precipitate –Salts Biological – can form minerals Weathering – concentrate minerals in the soil
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Resources and Reserves Minerals are classified as: – Mineral Resources Elements, chemical compounds, minerals or rocks that can be extracted to obtain a usable commodity –Mineral Reserves The portion of the resource that is identified and from which usable materials can be legally and economically extracted at the time of evaluation
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Availability of Mineral Resources When the availability of a mineral becomes limited, there are 4 possible solutions: 1. Find more sources 2. Recycle and reuse what has already been obtained 3. Reduce consumption 4. Find a substitute
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Impacts of Mineral Development Environmental Impacts –Mining procedures Surface vs. Deep-mining –Waste Pollution
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Impacts of Mineral Development Social Impacts –Increased demand for housing and services in mining areas –Economic stress of mining shutdown
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Minimizing Environmental Impact of Mineral Development Environmental regulations at the federal, state and local levels On-site and off-site treatment of waste Practicing the 3 R’s of waste management
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Minerals and Sustainability R-to-C Ratio –A measure of the time available for finding the solutions to depletion of nonrenewable resources –R = known reserves –C = rate of consumption High Fluctuation
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