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Chapter 3: Earth Materials Minerals and Rocks

No cleavage Quartz SiO2 Conchoidal Framework 27

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
83 views60 pages

Chapter 3: Earth Materials Minerals and Rocks

No cleavage Quartz SiO2 Conchoidal Framework 27

Uploaded by

Kashish K Bansla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 3: EARTH MATERIALS

Minerals and Rocks

1
Importance of minerals?

- Essential in many engineering fields

- Use of proper minerals as construction materials

- Used as raw material for marketable products

- In electronic industry, minerals or the synthetic


equivalents are used to make computer chips,
diodes, capacitors, superconductors etc.

- Historically, minerals have been the foundation of


much, if not all, technology
2
Amoco Building, Chicago

3
What are minerals?
• Minerals are the building blocks
of rocks.

4
What are minerals?

Naturally occurring = found in nature

Solid, crystalline substance = atoms are


arranged in orderly patterns

Generally inorganic = not a product of


living tissue

With a specific chemical formula = unique


chemical composition
5
Thought questions for this chapter

Coal, a natural organic substance that forms from


decaying vegetation, is not considered to be a mineral.
However, when coal is heated to high temperatures and
buried under high pressures, it is transformed into the
mineral graphite. Why is it, then, that coal is not
considered a mineral, but graphite is? Explain your
reasoning.

6
Smallest
repeating unit of
a crystal
structure in 3D

Relationship between atoms, molecules, unit cells


made up of several molecules, a collection of unit
cells, and mineral crystal 7
The atomic structure of matter
• The atom is the smallest unit of an
element that retains the physical and
chemical properties of that element.
Atoms are building blocks of minerals

Atomic nucleus: protons and neutrons.

Electrons: cloud of moving particles


surrounding the nucleus.

Example: the carbon atom (C) 8


The carbon atom

…and a nucleus
of 6 protons …

…and 6 neutrons.

electron (–)
proton (+)
Neutron (neutral)

Atomic Mass = # of Protons + # of neutrons

Notation: 12C
6

Atomic No. = # of electrons or # of protons 9


The atomic structure of matter

Isotopes – atoms of the same element with


different numbers of neutrons.

Example:
12C : has 6 neutrons and 6 protons (most
6
abundant isotope)
13C : 7 neutrons and 6 protons
6

14C : 8 neutrons and 6 protons


6
10
Chemical Reactions

Chemical reactions – interactions of the


atoms of two or more elements in
certain fixed proportions.

Example: H + H + O = H2O

Example: Na + Cl = NaCl

11
Chemical Reactions

Chemical compounds that are minerals


form by:
Electron sharing (Covalent bond)- Stronger
bonds
or
Electron transfer (ionic bond)
Or
Metallic bonds (found in metals, many
atoms share the same electrons)
12
Electron transfer:
Sodium (Na) + chlorine (Cl) =
NaCl (halite)

Each sodium ion (circled in red)


is surrounded by 6 chloride ions 13
(circled in yellow), and vice versa.
Electron Sharing:
Carbon atoms in a diamond & graphite

14
Most minerals have a combination of ionic, covalent, or
metallic bond types 15
The atomic structure of minerals

Electrical charges of atomic ions

Cation – positively charged (Na+)

Anion – negatively charged (Cl-)

Atomic ions arrange themselves


according to charge and size.

16
The atomic structure of minerals

Ionic Radii given in 10-10 m = 1Å (angstrom)

17
How do minerals form?

Crystallization –
As magma cools atoms slow down and
come together in the proper chemical
proportion and proper crystalline
arrangement

High Temperature – atoms are quite


mobile and nucleate, simpler structure

Time – Cooling over a long period of time,


big crystals 18
Chemical classes of minerals

19
Rock-forming minerals :
silicate minerals

Silicate ion (SiO44–)


Tetrahedra are
the basic building
blocks of all
silicate minerals.
About 95% of
Earth’s minerals
Oxygen ions
are silicates.
(O2–) Silicon ion
(Si4+)

20
Quartz
structure
Quartz is
Silicate ion (SiO44–)
a silicate
The silicate polymorph.
ion forms
tetrahedra.

Oxygen ions
(O2–) Silicon ion
(Si4+)

21
Rock-forming minerals-Silicates

Types of silicate minerals

Isolated tetrahedra (Nesosilicates)


Single-chain linkages (Inosilicates)
Double-chain linkages (Inosilicates)
Sheet linkages (Phyllosilicates)
Frameworks (Tectosilicates)

Tetrahedra arranged in different ways are


characteristic of different silicate minerals and
determine their cleavage directions
22
Cleavage planes
and number of Silicate
Mineral Chemical formula cleavage directions structure Specimen

1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4

Forsterite: Mg2SiO4
Fayalite: Fe2SiO4

Fracture
23
Cleavage planes
and number of Silicate
Mineral Chemical formula cleavage directions structure Specimen

1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4

2 planes at 90°
Single chains

Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3

24
Cleavage planes
and number of Silicate
Mineral Chemical formula cleavage directions structure Specimen

1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4

2 planes at 90°
Single chains

Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3

2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains

Amphibole Ca2(Mg, Fe)5Si8O22(OH)2

25
Cleavage planes
and number of Silicate
Mineral Chemical formula cleavage directions structure Specimen

1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4

2 planes at 90°
Single chains

Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3

2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains

Amphibole Ca2(Mg, Fe)5Si8O22(OH)2

1 plane Sheets
Muscovite:
Micas KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2

Biotite:
K(Mg, Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2

26
Cleavage planes
and number of Silicate
Mineral Chemical formula cleavage directions structure Specimen

1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4

2 planes at 90°
Single chains

Pyroxene (Mg, Fe)SiO3

2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains

Amphibole Ca2(Mg, Fe)5Si8O22(OH)2

1 plane Sheets
Muscovite:
Micas KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2

Biotite:
K(Mg, Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2

2 planes at 90° Three-dimensional


framework
Orthoclase feldspar:
KAlSi3O8
Feldspars
Plagioclase feldspar:
(Ca, Na) AlSi3O8

27
Plagioclase:
Albite: Na AlSi3O8
Anorthite: CaAl2Si2O8

28
Estimated Volume Percentages for common
minerals in the Earth’s crust 29
There are three important groups of silicates:

• ferromagnesian silicates, e.g., olivine and


pyroxene— common in the mantle

• feldspar and quartz— common in the crust

• clay mineral —K, Al, Mg, Fe silicates


– commonly produced by chemical
weathering
– Kaolinite: Al2Si2O5(OH)4 30
Minerals as valuable resources

Types of ore minerals


Vein deposits
Disseminated deposits
Igneous deposits
Sedimentary deposits

31
Minerals as valuable resources
Origin of vein deposits
Groundwater dissolves metal oxides
and sulfides. Heated by the magma, it
rises, precipitating metal ores in joints.
Deformed
country rock
Geysers and
hot springs Vein deposit

Groundwater

Magma

Plutonic
intrusion 32
Minerals as valuable resources
Typical sulfide minerals from vein deposits

PbS HgS FeS2 ZnS

33
Minerals as valuable resources

Igneous deposits

Chromite
(Fe, Mg)Cr2O4
layers (dark)
in layered
igneous rock

34
Minerals as valuable resources

Sedimentary deposits
Copper, iron, other metals
Gold, diamonds, other heavy
minerals (placers)

35
Identification of minerals

-Physical properties- study of hand


specimen

-Optical Properties- study of thin sections


using a polarizing microscope, also called a
petrographic microscope

36
Physical properties of minerals

Crystal habit/Shape
Luster
Color
Streak
Cleavage
Fracture
Hardness
Density/Specific Gravity
Other-Magnetism, reaction with acid
37
38
Crystal Habit/Form
For well developed crystals, FORM and HABIT are excellent diagnostic property. Form
refers to a group of crystal faces, related by their crystal symmetry.

A crystal form is a set of crystal faces that are related to each other by symmetry.

39
Luster
-the way mineral surface reflects light
-Three types: Metallic - reflects light well
non metallic
submetallic luster

40
Metallic Luster of Pyrite Vitreous Luster of Gypsum

Non Metallic Luster


of Ba-Silicate

41
Color
-In some cases it is diagnostic property, but in others it is ambiguous
or even misleading
-color results from absorption, or lack of absorption, of various
wavelengths of light. When all wavelengths of visible light is
reflected back, the mineral appears white. When all are absorbed
mineral appears black.

Trace elements (0.1 wt% concentration) that produce typical color


(called Chromophores)

Co: violet-red color


Cr: orange-red color
Cu: azure blue color
Fe: red color
Mn: pink color
Ni: green color
V: red-orange color

Most transition elements impart color in minerals.

42
Color in Quartz

43
Streak

- Streak is actually the color of the


powder of a mineral, in many ways is
the true color of the mineral
- Useful for distinguishing oxide and
sulfides
- to test for streak, rub a mineral across
a tile of white unglazed porcelain and
examine the color of the streak left
behind

44
Streak

(cherry) Red
streak of dark gray
Hematite streak of
Galena
Pyrite (known as Fool's Gold) is
always brassy yellow, but has
black streak

45
What is the streak of minerals harder
than the streak plate?

A streak plate is only about 6.5 in hardness


and a mineral harder than 6.5 will not leave
a streak on a streak plate but might scratch
the plate leaving a white powder of
porcelain, not the mineral

46
Cleavage
 When a mineral breaks it does so either by fracturing or
by cleaving.
 Crystal cleavage produces flat crystal face. Cleavage
represents planes of weak bonding in a crystal structure
 reproducible- a crystal can be broken along the same
parallel plane over and over again
 all cleavage must parallel a possible crystal face
 the same mineral will always, always have the same
cleavage
 the angle between cleavages is also important to note
and maybe diagnostic
 Mineralogist’s 1st hand Classification:
 perfect, imperfect, good, distinct, indistinct, and poor
47
Fracture
The way a mineral tends to break.
Any broken surface that is not a cleavage

48
Cleavage & Fracture

49
Cleavage
Types

50
Cleavage plane in Mica
Silicate layer

Aluminum
hydroxide layer “Sandwich”
Aluminum atom
Cleavage
Silicate layer occurs
between
Potassium ions layers.

“Sandwich”

Muscovite:
KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Biotite:
K(Mg, Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2 51
Mica and its cleavage

52
Rhombic cleavage

Calcite
Gypsum

53
The Geologist Can Find An Ordinary
Quartz, (that) Tourists Call Diamond

The hardness of a mineral is its ability to 54


resist abrasion or scratching
Specific Gravity
Specific gravity is a measure of the density of a mineral
Ex: Gold can easily be distinguished from "fool's gold" by specific
gravity alone

SG = rMineral/rwater

At 4 ºC density of water is 1 gm/cm3

So at 4 ºC SG = rMineral

At room T also, the density of water is ~1 gm/cm3, so we ignore the


minor differences in density and specific gravity
If a mineral has a SG of 2, then it is twice as dense as water.
The SG of most minerals that on the earth’s crust have a specific
gravity of approximately 2.75. Non-metallic minerals tend to be
of a low density.

Berman Balance Technique


SG = weightair/(weightair – weightwater) 55
Other Characteristic Properties

Magnetism: ex: magnetite

Acid Reaction: Calcite reaction with HCl

Odor: sulfur smell, clay minerals have


Earthy smell, Arsenic minerals have garlic
smell etc.

Taste: Halite

56
Thought questions for this chapter

1. Draw a simple diagram to show how silicon and oxygen


in silicate minerals share electrons.

2. Diopside, a pyroxene, has the formula (Ca, Mg)2Si2O6.


What does that tell you about its crystal structure and
cation substitution?

3. What physical properties of sheet silicates are related to


their crystal structure?

4. There are at least eight physical properties one can use


to identify unknown minerals. Which ones are most
useful in discriminating between minerals that look
alike? 57
Key terms and concepts
Anion and cation
Atom
Atomic mass and number
Bedding
Chemical and biochemical sediments
Cleavage and color
Contact metamorphism
Covalent bond
Crystal and crystal habit
Density
Electron
Electron sharing and electron transfer
Erosion
Extrusive and intrusive igneous rock
Foliation 59
Key terms and concepts
Fracture
Hardness
Igneous rock
Ionic bond
Isotope
Lithification
Luster
Metallic bond
Metamorphic rock
Mineral and mineralogy
Mohs scale of hardness
Neutron
Nucleus
Ore
Polymorph 60
Key terms and concepts

Precipitate
Proton
Regional metamorphism
Rock and rock cycle
Sediment and sedimentary rock
Siliclastic sediments
Specific gravity
Streak
Texture
Vein deposit
Weathering

61

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