Chapter 3: Earth Materials Minerals and Rocks
Chapter 3: Earth Materials Minerals and Rocks
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Importance of minerals?
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What are minerals?
• Minerals are the building blocks
of rocks.
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What are minerals?
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Smallest
repeating unit of
a crystal
structure in 3D
…and a nucleus
of 6 protons …
…and 6 neutrons.
electron (–)
proton (+)
Neutron (neutral)
Notation: 12C
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Example:
12C : has 6 neutrons and 6 protons (most
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abundant isotope)
13C : 7 neutrons and 6 protons
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Example: H + H + O = H2O
Example: Na + Cl = NaCl
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Chemical Reactions
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Most minerals have a combination of ionic, covalent, or
metallic bond types 15
The atomic structure of minerals
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The atomic structure of minerals
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How do minerals form?
Crystallization –
As magma cools atoms slow down and
come together in the proper chemical
proportion and proper crystalline
arrangement
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Rock-forming minerals :
silicate minerals
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Quartz
structure
Quartz is
Silicate ion (SiO44–)
a silicate
The silicate polymorph.
ion forms
tetrahedra.
Oxygen ions
(O2–) Silicon ion
(Si4+)
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Rock-forming minerals-Silicates
1 plane Isolated
tetrahedra
Olivine (Mg, Fe)2SiO4
Forsterite: Mg2SiO4
Fayalite: Fe2SiO4
Fracture
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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
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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
2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains
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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
2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains
1 plane Sheets
Muscovite:
Micas KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Biotite:
K(Mg, Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
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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
2 planes at 60°
and 120° Double chains
1 plane Sheets
Muscovite:
Micas KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Biotite:
K(Mg, Fe)3AlSi3O10(OH)2
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Plagioclase:
Albite: Na AlSi3O8
Anorthite: CaAl2Si2O8
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Estimated Volume Percentages for common
minerals in the Earth’s crust 29
There are three important groups of silicates:
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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
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Minerals as valuable resources
Igneous deposits
Chromite
(Fe, Mg)Cr2O4
layers (dark)
in layered
igneous rock
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Minerals as valuable resources
Sedimentary deposits
Copper, iron, other metals
Gold, diamonds, other heavy
minerals (placers)
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Identification of minerals
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Physical properties of minerals
Crystal habit/Shape
Luster
Color
Streak
Cleavage
Fracture
Hardness
Density/Specific Gravity
Other-Magnetism, reaction with acid
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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.
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Luster
-the way mineral surface reflects light
-Three types: Metallic - reflects light well
non metallic
submetallic luster
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Metallic Luster of Pyrite Vitreous Luster of Gypsum
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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.
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Color in Quartz
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Streak
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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
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What is the streak of minerals harder
than the streak plate?
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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
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Fracture
The way a mineral tends to break.
Any broken surface that is not a cleavage
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Cleavage & Fracture
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Cleavage
Types
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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
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Rhombic cleavage
Calcite
Gypsum
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The Geologist Can Find An Ordinary
Quartz, (that) Tourists Call Diamond
SG = rMineral/rwater
So at 4 ºC SG = rMineral
Taste: Halite
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Thought questions for this chapter
Precipitate
Proton
Regional metamorphism
Rock and rock cycle
Sediment and sedimentary rock
Siliclastic sediments
Specific gravity
Streak
Texture
Vein deposit
Weathering
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