REPORTING NOTES Word
REPORTING NOTES Word
REPORTING NOTES Word
MINERALS - are any naturally occurring solid substance with a definite chemical
composition.
• nearly all (98.5%) of Earths crust is made up of only eight elements - oxygen,
silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, sodium, potassium, and magnesium - and these
are the elements that make up most of the minerals.
• MINERALOGISTS - are scientists who study minerals.
• CRYSTAL - are made from atoms that join together to form minerals. They are
arranged in a regular, repeating pattern. ( CUBIC - the unit cell is in the shape of a
cube. Most common and simplest shapes formed in crystals and minerals;
PRISMATIC - have crystals that show a uniform cross-section prismatic crystals;
AMORPHOUS - no crystalline structure.
PROPERTIES OF MINERALS:
• COLOR - The perceived wavelength of light bounced off from the material. The
most obvious property but it is not reliable because some minerals have the same
color. It is caused by electromagnetic radiation interacting with electrons
• LUSTER - The way light reflects off the minerals surface. (metallic luster / non-
metallic luster) TRANSPARENCY/DIAPHANEITY - the ability of light to pass through
it.
Luster is described in the following terms:
A. Metallic - it is opaque and reflects light as metal would
B. Sub-metallic - mineral is opaque and dull and dark colored
C. Nonmetallic - it does not reflect light like metal
D. Waxy - looks like paraffin or wax
E. Vitreous - looks like broken glass
F. Pearly - it appears iridescent, like a pearl
G. Silky - it looks fibrous like silk
H. Greasy it looks like oil in water
I. Resinous - it looks like hardened tree sap
J. Adamantine - it looks brilliant, like a diamond
• CLEAVAGE - The minerals tendency to break along flat surface. Also called the
predictable breaking point. PARTING - sometimes called “false cleavage” is similar
in appearance to cleavage but is instead produced by structural defects in the
mineral.
• FRACTURE - The pattern in which a mineral breaks in a direction that does not
correspond to a plane of cleavage. also called random breaking.
• SPECIFIC GRAVITY - How heavy the mineral is relative to the same volume of
water.
MINERAL GROUPS:
SILICATE MINERALS - makes up over 90% of the Earth’s crust and are by far the
largest mineral group. One silicon atom bonds to four oxygen atom to form silica
tetrahedron
EX. garnet, topaz, talc
MAGMA - a hot fluid or semifluid material below or within the earth’s crust from
which lava and other igneous rock is formed on cooling.
CLASSIFICATIONS OF ROCKS:
1. IGNEOUS ROCKS - the word “igneous” comes from the Latin word “ignis”
which means “of fire”. are formed from cooled and hardened magma or lava.
• EXTRUSIVE IGNEOUS ROCKS - Volcanic rocks. Forms as lava quickly cools in the
surface of the earth creating fine-grained rocks. Ex. basalt and obsidian
7. METAMORPHIC ROCKS - are formed by great heat and pressure. They are
often made from other types of rocks. Despite these conditions, metamorphic
rocks do not get hot enough to melt.
UPLIFT - when intrusive igneous rocks are then brought to the surface where they
are exposed to weathering and erosion.
EROSION - the natural process wherein sediments are removed or transported from
its place of origin by running water, winds, glaciers, or gravity.
TRANSPORT - wind , water, glaciers, rivers, and oceans transport these particles or
sediments until they settle in an area where they will undertake deposition.
MELTING - if the temperature continues to increase and exceed the melting point of
the rocks, it will eventually undergo melting and turn them into magma.
Differences:
- minerals usually have a shape for a structure and are usually the same color,
whereas rocks have no definitive shapes.
- rocks sometimes contain fossils, but no minerals have fossil.
- rocks have no definite chemical compositions, but minerals do
MINERAL RESOURCES
MINERAL RESOURCE - is a concentration of naturally occurring material from
the earth’s crust that we can extract and process into raw materials and useful
products at an affordable cost.
MINERAL RESERVES - identified resources from which we can extract the mineral
profitably at current prices.
11.RESIDUAL ORE DEPOSITS - a type of deposit that results from the accumulation
of valuable materials through chemical weathering process.
MINERAL EXPLORATION:
A. PROJECT DESIGN - the initial stage in formulating the project. Includes review of
available data; government requirements; review of social, environmental,
political, and economic acceptability of the project; and budget and organization
proposals.
B. STRIP MINING - is useful and economical for extracting mineral deposits that lie
in large horizontal beds close to the earth’s surface but has one or more layer of
rock and dirt on top of it. The mineral layer is covered by an even thickness of
overburden composed of soft topsoil and weathered rocks in succession.
AREA STRIP MINING - used where the terrain is fairly flat, a gigantic earthmover
strips away the overburden, and a power shovel, which can be as tall as a 20-story
building, removes the mineral deposit.
MILLING PROCESS:
• CRUSHING and SCREENING - are the first stages of controlled size reduction
• HEAVY MEDIA SEPARATION - crushed rocks are submerged in liquid where the
heavier/denser minerals sink thus are separated from the lighter minerals.
• FLOATATION - the powdered ore is placed into an agitated and frothy slurry where
some minerals and metals, based on their physical or chemical properties may
sink to the bottom or stick to the bubbles and rise to the top.
• CYANIDE HEAP LEACHING - method used for low-grade gold ore where crushed
rock is placed on a “leach pile” where cyanide solution is sprayed or dripped on
top of the pile, as it filters down the rocks, the gold is dissolved into the solution
and is processed further to extract the gold.
DEPLETION TIME - the time it takes to use up usually 80% of a mineral reserve at a
given rate of use.
ELECTRICITY - is the form of energy which can be generated from almost any
energy source
NON-RENEWABLE RESOURCES
are those that cannot be replenished or regenerated on a human time scale.
1. FOSSIL FUEL
- are formed by natural processes such as anaerobic decomposition of buried dead
organisms
- are presently the world’s primary energy source.
- provides most of the energy that supports transportation, electricity production,
heating, and cooling of buildings, and various industrial activities.
- it includes coal, oil, petroleum, and gas which are non renewable sources of
energy derived from the remains of prehistoric plants and animals that died
million of years ago and were buried under the right conditions to form fossils.
PETROLEUM - comes from the Latin word “petra” meaning “rock” and “oleum”
meaning “oil”. Its is a naturally occurring liquid composed of complex hydrocarbons,
and is found in geological formations underneath Earth’s surface
- It is a fossil fuel derived from large quantities of microscopic aquatic organisms
such as algae and planktons whose remains settled to the sea or lake bottoms
million of years ago, and were buried beneath fine sediments anoxic conditions.
With increasing pressure and temperature due to continuous burial, the organic
matter in these organisms transform into waxy material known as KEROGEN and
eventually into hydrocarbons through the process of CATAGENESIS
- Petroleum forms within specific depth, pressure, and temperature range known as
OIL WINDOW
- Temperatures below the range of (50-150 Celsius) kerogen is not transformed
into hydrocarbons. On the other hand, if temperatures increases beyond the oil
window, oil is converted into natural gas in the process called THERMAL
CRACKLING.
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
energy resource that will not run out because they are applied as quickly as
they are used.
1. GEOTHERMAL ENERGY - Is generated by heat from the Earth’s core heating
water into steam which turns turbines in order to generate electricity
GEOTHERMAL GRADIENT - the rate of change in temperature with depth. The
temperature of Earth gets warmer as you go deeper towards the core.
PROS:
• minimal environmental impact
• efficient
• power plants have low emissions
• low cost after the initial investment
CONS:
• only found in few areas around the world
• expensive start up cost
• wells could eventually be depleted.
PROS:
• No emission
• reliable
• capable of generating large amounts of power
• output can be regulated to meet demand
CONS:
• environmental impacts by changing the environment in the dam area
• dams are expensive to build
• dams may be affected by drought.
3. WIND ENERGY - creating electricity using wind, or airflows that occur naturally
in the Earth’s atmosphere with the use of modern turbines to capture kinetic
energy from the winds. It is a clean energy source which produces no air or
water pollution because there is no fuel burned to generate electricity.
WIND - is the movement of air caused by differences in atmospheric pressure.
PROS:
• no emmission
• affordable
• little disruption to the ecosystem
CONS:
• relatively high output
• output is proportional to wind speed
• not feasible for all geographic locations
• high initial investment and maintenance cost
• extensive land use
4. SOLAR ENERGY - energy coming from the sun. considered as one of the Earth’s
most plentiful source of energy. The amount of energy received by the Earth
every hour is more than enough to satisfy global energy needs for a year.
PROS:
• non-polluting
• most abundant energy source
• systems last 15-30 years
CONS:
• high initial investment
• dependent on sunny weather
• supplemental energy may be needed in low sunlight areas
• requires large physical space for PV cell panels
PROS:
• abundant supply
• fewer emissions than fossil fuel sources
• can be used in diesel engines
CONS:
• source must be near usage to cut transportation cost
• emits some pollution as gas/liquid waste
• increases emissions of nitrogen oxides which are air pollutants