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Minerals

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Minerals are naturally occurring, inorganic solids with an orderly crystalline ... Adamantine: the brightest, usually occurs in minerals with a high refractive ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minerals


1
Minerals
2
  • Rocks are what Earth is made of. Minerals are
    what rocks are made of.

3
  • Minerals are naturally occurring, inorganic
    solids with an orderly crystalline structure and
    a definite chemical composition.

4
  • Naturally occurring means that it is formed by
    natural geologic processes.
  • Solid, means it is solid within the temperature
    ranges that are normal or Earths surface. Water
    is not a mineral even though it occurs naturally.
    But, ice is.
  • Orderly crystalline structure. This means that
    the atoms line up in a repetitive pattern.

5
  • Definite chemical composition means that most
    minerals are compounds of more than one element.
    Only a few (such as gold) consist of only a
    single element
  • Generally considered inorganic, sugar is a
    crystalline solid but it comes from plants. Salt
    is inorganic.

6
  • How do minerals form?
  • There are four major processes -

7
  • Crystallization from magma - as magma cools,
    elements combine to form minerals. Minerals form
    in a predictable order as magma cools.
  • Precipitation - many minerals are dissolved in
    water on Earth. Changes in water temperature may
    cause dissolved material to precipitate out or
    minerals may combine with each other.

8
  • Changes in pressure and temperature - in a rock
    that is already solid, changes in pressure and
    temperature may cause new minerals to form from
    old ones. The atoms are rearranged to form more
    compact minerals.

9
  • Formation from hydrothermal solutions - hot
    mixtures of water and dissolved substances may
    come into contact with existing minerals. This
    can cause new minerals to form.

10
Mineral Groups
11
  • Silicates - The silicates are the largest, the
    most interesting and the most complicated class
    of minerals by far.
  • Approximately 30 of all minerals are silicates
    and some geologists estimate that 90 of the
    Earth's crust is made up of silicates.
  • With oxygen and silicon the two most abundant
    elements in the earth's crust silicates abundance
    is no real surprise.

12
  • The basic chemical unit of silicates is the
    (SiO4) tetrahedron shaped anionic group with a
    negative four charge (-4). The central silicon
    ion has a charge of positive four while each
    oxygen has a charge of negative two (-2) and thus
    each silicon-oxygen bond is equal to one half
    (1/2) the total bond energy of oxygen.

13
  • This condition leaves the oxygens with the option
    of bonding to another silicon ion and therefore
    linking one (SiO4) tetrahedron to another and
    another, etc
  • This condition leaves the oxygens with the option
    of bonding to another silicon ion and therefore
    linking one (SiO4) tetrahedron to another and
    another, etc..

14
  • The complicated structures that these silicate
    tetrahedrons form is truly amazing. They can form
    as single units, (like quartz), double units,
    chains, sheets, rings and framework structures.

15
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16
  • The different ways that the silicate tetrahedrons
    combine is what makes the Silicate Class the
    largest, the most interesting and the most
    complicated class of minerals.
  • The place of formation (temperature and pressure)
    and the chemical composition of the magma
    determine which silicate mineral will form.
  • Quartz crystals form at about 700º C
  • Olivine crystallizes at about 1200º C
  • Geologists can provide scientists clues about the
    conditions in which the minerals formed.

17
  • Carbonates are the second most common mineral
    group
  • They contain the element carbon, oxygen and one
    or more other metallic elements.
  • Calcite is the most common carbonate mineral.
  • Limestone and marble are composed of carbonate
    minerals

limestone
Marble
18
  • Oxides are minerals
  • that contain oxygen
  • and one or more other
  • elements which are
  • usually metals.
  • Ti2O us titanium oxide
  • Al2O3 is corundum (ruby and sapphire)
  • Fe2O3 is hematite

19
  • Sulfates and Sulfides are minerals that contain
    the element sulfur.
  • PbS is galena
  • ZnS is sphalerite
  • FeS2 is pyrite

20
  • Halides are minerals that contain a halogen ion
    plus one or more other elements
  • Halogens are elements from Group 7A of the
    periodic table.
  • NaCl is a halide, table salt
  • CaF2 is fluorite

21
  • Native elements are minerals that exist in
    relatively pure form.
  • This can include gold (Au), silver (Ag), copper
    (Cu), sulfur (S) and carbon (C).
  • Native forms of carbon are diamond and graphite

22
Properties Of Minerals
  • Color - this is often not a good way to identify
    a mineral because trace elements can give the
    same mineral different colors.
  • Streak - this is the color of a mineral in its
    powdered form. The test is made by rubbing a
    mineral across a streak plate

23
  • Luster - how is light reflected from the surface
    of a mineral?
  • Metallic, Sub-metallic or Non-metallic
  • Adamantine the brightest, usually occurs in
    minerals with a high refractive index (e.g.
    diamond)
  • Resinous (e.g. sulfur)
  • Vitreous glass-like
  • Pearly slightly iridescent
  • Silky usually in fibrous minerals
  • Waxy (e.g. chalcedony)
  • Earthy very dull luster, usually in minerals
    with a rough surface

24
  • Crystal form is the visible expression of a
    minerals internal arrangement of atoms.
  • Hardness - is a measure of the resistance of a
    mineral to being scratched. Geologists use a
    standard measure of hardness called the Mohs
    scale. The Mohs scale consists of 10 minerals
    arranged from 10 (hardest) to 1 (softest)

25
  • Cleavage is the tendency of a mineral to cleave
    or break along flat even surfaces. Micas cleave
    in horizontal plates. Cleavage shows where a
    minerals internal bonds are strong and weak.
  • Fracture is the way a mineral breaks when struck
    with a hammer. Minerals that do not cleave,
    fracture.

26
  • Density is a property of all matter that is the
    ratio of an objects mass to its volume. The
    units are mass/volume. In SI, density is
    measured in g/cm3.
  • Distinctive properties - some minerals have
    distinctive properties. Calcite exhibits double
    refraction. Sulfur compounds smell like rotten
    eggs. Carbonate minerals will fizz when they
    come into contact with HCl.
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