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Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks Chapter 2
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Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Feb 25, 2016

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Chapter 2. Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks. Earth Materials – Minerals. Gemstones and other minerals, such as gold, have fascinated people for thousands of years and have been supposed to have mystical or curative powers Minerals have many essential uses in industrial societies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Earth Materials—Minerals and Rocks

Chapter 2

Page 2: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Earth Materials – Minerals• Gemstones and other minerals,

– such as gold, – have fascinated people for

thousands of years – and have been supposed – to have mystical or curative

powers• Minerals have many essential

uses – in industrial societies

• Minerals are the basic units – that make up most of Earth’s

materials

Page 3: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Earth Materials – Rocks

• With only a few exceptions rocks – are solid aggregates of minerals

• Rocks too find many uses– rocks crushed for aggregate in cement and for

roadbeds– sawed and polished rocks for tombstones,

monuments, mantle pieces and counter tops– Even the soils we depend on

• for most of our food • formed by alteration of rocks

Page 4: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Rocks

• Granite cliff of El Capitan, Yosemite, California– rises 900 m

above the valley floor

– highest unbroken cliff in the world

Page 5: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Minerals• Geological definition of a mineral:

– naturally occurring– crystalline solid

• crystalline means that minerals • have an ordered internal arrangement of their

atoms– minerals have a narrowly

defined chemical composition– and characteristic physical

properties such as• density• hardness• color...

Page 6: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Minerals

Minerals on display – at the

California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco

Page 7: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Earth Materials

• Some materials formed by the Earth – are interesting and

attractive– such as this

metamorphic rock• from the shoreline of

Lake Superior at Marquette, Michigan

Page 8: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Matter and Its Composition• Matter

– is anything that has mass and occupies space– exists as solids, liquids, and gases– consist of elements and atoms

• Element– is a chemical substance – that cannot be chemically decomposed – into simpler substances– and is composed of tiny particles called atoms

Page 9: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Atoms

• Atoms are the smallest units of matter – that retain the characteristics of the element

• Atoms have– a compact nucleus containing

• protons – particles with a positive electrical charge• neutrons – electrically neutral particles

– particles orbiting the nucleus • electrons – negatively charged particles

Page 10: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Structure of an Atom

• The dense nucleus of an atom– consisting of

protons and neutrons

– is surrounded by a cloud of orbiting electrons

Page 11: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Atoms

• Atomic number = the number of protons

• Atomic mass number = number of protons + number of neutrons

• The number of neutrons in an atom – may vary

Page 12: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Isotopes

• The different forms of an element’s atoms – with varying numbers of neutrons – are called isotopes.

• Different isotopes of the same element – have different atomic mass numbers– behave the same chemically

• Isotopes are important in radiometric dating

Page 13: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Carbon Isotopes• Carbon atoms (with 6 protons)

– have 6 neutrons = Carbon 12 (12C)– have 7 neutrons = Carbon 13 (13C)– or have 8 neutrons = Carbon 14 (14C)– thereby making up three isotopes of carbon.

Page 14: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Electrons and Shells• Electrons orbit the nucleus in one or more shells• The outermost shell participates

– in chemical bonding – and contains up to 8 electrons

• Noble gas configuration of 8 electrons • or 2 for helium

– completes the outermost shell• Other atoms attain

– a noble gas configuration – in the process of bonding

Page 15: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Bonding and Compounds

• Bonding – the process whereby atoms join to other atoms

• Compound – a substance resulting from the bonding – of two or more elements

• Oxygen gas (O2) is and element• Ice is a compound

– made up of hydrogen and oxygen (H2O)• Most minerals are compounds

Page 16: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Ionic Bonding• Ion

– an atom that has gained or lost one or more electrons

– and thus has a negative or positive charge • One way for atoms to attain the noble gas

configuration – is by transferring electrons, producing ions

• Ionic bonding – attraction between two ions of opposite charge

Page 17: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Covalent Bonding• Another way for atoms

– to attain the noble gas configuration – is by sharing electrons

• Covalent bonding– results from

sharing electrons

shared electrons

Page 18: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Minerals—The Building Blocks of Rocks

• A mineral’s composition is shown by a chemical formula– a shorthand way of indicating how many atoms

of different kinds it contains

Quartz: SiO2

Ratio: 1: 2

– Quartz consists of 1 silicon atom for every 2 oxygen atoms

– Orthoclase consists of 1 potassium, 1 aluminum, and 3 silicon for every 8 oxygen atoms

KAlSi3O8

1: 1: 3: 8

Page 19: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Native Elements

• A few minerals consist of only one element.

• They are not compounds.

• They are known as native elements.

• Examples: – gold – formula: Au– diamond – formula: C

Page 20: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Crystalline Solids

• By definition, minerals are crystalline solids– with atoms arranged in a specific 3D framework

• If given enough room to grow freely, – minerals form perfect crystals with – planar surfaces, called crystal faces– sharp corners– straight edges

Page 21: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Narrowly Defined Chemical Composition

• Some minerals have very specific compositions– examples are halite (NaCl) or quartz (SiO2)

• but others have a range of compositions – because one element can substitute for another – if the atoms of the two elements have

• the same electrical charge• and are about the same size

– example: olivine • (Mg,Fe)2SiO4• iron and magnesium substitution in any proportion

Page 22: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Mineral Properties

• Mineral properties are controlled by– Chemical composition– Crystalline structure

• Mineral properties are particularly useful – for mineral identification and include:

• cleavage • fracture• hardness• specific gravity

• color• streak• luster• crystal form

Page 23: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

How Many Minerals Are There?

• More than 3500 minerals are known• Only about 2 dozen are particularly common• Many others are important resources• Mineral groups:

– minerals with the same negatively charged ion or ion group

– belong to the same mineral group• Most minerals in the crust

– belong to the group called silicates

Page 24: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Silicates

• Silicates are minerals containing silica – Si and O

• They make up perhaps 95% of Earth’s crust– and account for about 1/3 of all known minerals

• The basic building block of silicates – is the silica tetrahedron

• which consists of one silicon atom• surrounded by four oxygen atoms

Page 25: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Types of Silicates

• Silica tetrahedra can be – isolated units bonded to

other elements– arranged in chains (single or

double)– arranged in sheets– arranged in complex

3D networks

Page 26: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Types of Silicates

• Ferromagnesian silicates – contain iron (Fe), magnesium (Mg), or both

• Nonferromagnesian silicates – do not contain iron or magnesium

Page 27: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Ferromagnesian Silicates• Common ferromagnesian silicates include

– augite, a pyroxene-group mineral

– Hornblende, an amphibole-group mineral

biotite mica

– olivine

Page 28: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Nonferromagnesian Silicates

Quartz Potassium feldsparPlagioclase feldspar Muscovite

Page 29: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Other Mineral Groups

• Carbonates – minerals with carbonate ion (CO3)-2

– as in calcite (CaCO3), • found in limestone

– and dolomite [CaMg(CO3)2], • found in dolostone

• Other mineral groups are important, – but more as resources – than as constituents of rocks

Page 30: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Rock-Forming Minerals

• Most rocks are solid aggregates – of one or more minerals

• Thousands of minerals occur in rocks, – but only a few are common – and called rock-forming minerals

• Most rock-forming minerals are silicates, – but carbonates are also important

• Accessory minerals are present in small amounts – and are ignored in classifying rocks

Page 31: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Rock Cycle• The rock cycle is a pictorial representation

– of events leading to – the origin, destruction, change – and reformation of rocks

• Rocks belong to 3 major families– igneous– sedimentary– metamorphic

• The rock cycle shows – how these rock families are interrelated – and can be derived from one another

Page 32: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Rock Cycle

Pyroclastic material

Lava

Page 33: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rocks• All igneous rocks

– cool and crystallize from magma, – solidify from lava, – or consolidate from pyroclastic materials

• Magma is molten material – below the surface

• Lava is molten material on the surface• Pyroclastic materials

– are particles such as volcanic ash

Page 34: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Pyroclastic material

Lava

Igneous Part of the Rock Cycle

Page 35: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Categories of Igneous Rocks

• Extrusive or volcanic rocks – formed at the surface – from lava or pyroclastic materials

• Intrusive or plutonic rocks – formed from magma injected into the crust– or formed in place in the crust

• Plutons are intrusive bodies – consisting of plutonic rock

Page 36: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Plutons

Page 37: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rock Textures

• Texture – is the size, shape and arrangement– of crystals, grains and other constituents of a

rock• Igneous rocks have 4 textures

– that relate to cooling rate of magma or lava

Page 38: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

4 Cooling-Rate Textures• phaneritic,

– with visible grains • cooled slowly

• aphanitic, – with grains too small to see without magnification

• cooled quickly• porphyritic,

– with larger grains surrounded by a finer-grained groundmass

• cooled slowly first, then more quickly• glassy,

– with no grains • cooled too quickly for minerals to grow

Page 39: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rock Textures

• Other textures reveal further details – of the formation of the rock

• Vesicular texture, with holes (vesicles), – indicates the rock formed – as water vapor and other gases – became trapped during cooling of lava

• Pyroclastic or fragmental texture, – containing fragments, – formed by consolidation of volcanic ash – or other pyroclastic material

Page 40: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rock Textures

Rapid cooling

Aphanitic texture

Slow cooling

Phaneritic texture

2-stage cooling

Porphyritic texture

Page 41: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rock Textures

Glassy texture

cooling was too rapid for mineral growth

Vesicular texture

gasses trapped in cooling lava

Pyroclastic texture

particles fragmented during eruption

Page 42: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Classifying Igneous Rocks

• Texture and composition are the criteria – used to classify most igneous rocks

• Composition categories are based on silica content – felsic (>65% silica)– intermediate (53-65% silica)– mafic (45-52% silica)

• More felsic magmas have higher Na, K, Al• More mafic magmas have higher Ca, Fe, Mg

Page 43: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Classifying Igneous Rocks

Page 44: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Common Igneous Rocks

Basalt Gabbro

Andesite Diorite

Page 45: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Common Igneous Rocks

Rhyolite Granite

Page 46: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Classifying Igneous Rocks with Special Textures

Text

ure

Vesicular

Glassy

Pyroclastic or

Fragmental

CompositionPumice

Obsidian

Volcanic breccia

Tuff/welded tuff

MaficFelsic

Page 47: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Igneous Rocks with Special Textures

Tuff has pyroclastic texture.

Pumice is glassy and extremely vesicular.

Page 48: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Sedimentary Rocks• Sedimentary rocks form

– by the lithification of sediment• In the rock cycle, sediment originates when:

– mechanical and chemical weathering • breaks rocks down into smaller particles • and into solution

– Transport removes sediment • from its source area • and carries it elsewhere

– Running water, glaciers, wind and waves • transport sediment

– Deposition involves settling of particles, • and chemical and biological extraction of minerals

from solution

Page 49: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Sedimentary Part of the Rock Cycle

Page 50: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Lithification• Lithification means

– turning loose sediment into rock• Lithification occurs by

– burial • when additional sediment accumulates on top

– compaction • reduction of the amount of pore space between particles • because of the weight of overlying sediment

– cementation • precipitation of minerals within pores • that effectively binds sediment together

– calcium carbonate (CaCO3) cement is common– silica (SiO2) cement is common– iron oxide (Fe2O3) cement is less common

Page 51: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Categories of Sedimentary Rocks• Detrital sedimentary rocks

– consist of solid particles – derived from preexisting rocks (detritus)

• Chemical sedimentary rocks – consist of minerals derived from materials in

solution and – extracted by either

• inorganic chemical processes • or by the activities of organisms

– subcategory biochemical sedimentary rocks, for which

• the activities of organisms are important

Page 52: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Detrital Sedimentary Rocks• are composed of fragments or particles

– known as clasts = Clastic texture• These rocks are defined primarily by size of

clasts• conglomerate

– composed of gravel (>2mm)– with rounded clasts

• sedimentary breccia– also composed of gravel (>2mm)– but clasts are angular

• sandstone– composed of sand

Page 53: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Detrital Sedimentary Rocks• Mudrocks consist of particles < 1/16 mm

– siltstone• composed of silt-sized particles - 1/16-1/256 mm, • feel slightly gritty, • but not visible without magnification

– mudstone• composed of a mixture of silt- and clay-sized

particles– claystone

• composed of clay-sized particles – <1/256 mm, feel smooth even to the teeth

– shale• mudstone or claystone that • breaks along closely spaced parallel planes (fissile)

Page 54: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Chemical Sedimentary Rocks

• Recall that these rocks result – when inorganic chemical processes – or organisms extract minerals from solution

• This can result in different textures– Crystalline texture

• has an interlocking mosaic of mineral crystals• results from chemical precipitation

– Clastic texture• has an accumulation of broken pieces of shells

Page 55: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Chemical Sedimentary Rocks• Limestone – carbonate rock made of calcite

precipitated chemically or by organisms• Dolostone – carbonate rock made of dolomite usually

formed from limestone• Evaporites formed by

– inorganic chemical precipitation during evaporation– Rock salt – evaporite made of halite– Rock gypsum – evaporite made of gypsum

• Chert – compact, hard, fine grained silica, formed by chemical or biological precipitation (some consisting of microscopic shells of silica-secreting organisms)

• Coal – made of partially altered, compressed remains of land plants accumulated in swamps

Page 56: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Common Sedimentary Rocks

Conglomerate Sedimentary breccia

Quartz sandstone Shale

Page 57: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Common Sedimentary Rocks

Fossiliferous limestone

Rock salt

Chert Coal

Rock gypsum

Page 58: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Metamorphic Rocks

• Metamorphic rocks – result from transformation of other rocks – in the solid state, without melting

• Changes resulting from metamorphism– compositional

• new minerals form– textural

• minerals become reoriented• minerals recrystallize

– or both

Page 59: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Metamorphic Part of the Rock Cycle

Page 60: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Agents of Metamorphism• Heat provides new conditions

– where different minerals may be stable – and increases the rate of chemical reactions

• Pressure – Lithostatic pressure provides new conditions

• where different minerals may be stable • and forms smaller denser minerals

– Differential pressure • exerts force more intensely from one direction • causing deformation • and development of foliation.

• Fluid activity enhances metamorphism – by increasing the rate of chemical reactions – by transporting ions in solution

Page 61: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Types of Metamorphism• Contact metamorphism

– heat – chemical fluids– from an igneous body– alter rocks adjacent to the magma

• Regional metamorphism– large, elongated area– tremendous pressure– elevated temperatures– fluid activity– occurs at convergent and divergent plate

boundaries

Page 62: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Metamorphic Textures

• Foliated texture– platy and elongate minerals aligned parallel to

one another– caused by differential pressure

• Nonfoliated texture– mosaic of roughly equidimensional minerals– or platy and elongate minerals – arranged in a helter-skelter fashion – with random orientations

Page 63: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Formation of Foliation

• When rocks are subjected to differential pressure– the minerals typically rearrange or grow parallel to

each other

Page 64: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Formation of Foliation• Microscopic

view – of a

metamorphic rock

– with foliation– showing the

parallel arrangement of minerals

Page 65: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Foliated Metamorphic Rocks

• Slate – very fine-grained, breaks in flat pieces

• Phyllite – fine-grained (coarser than slate but grains are

still too small to see without magnification)– breaks in flat pieces

• Schist – clearly visible platy and/or elongate minerals

• Gneiss – alternating dark and light bands of minerals

Page 66: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Nonfoliated Metamorphic Rocks

• Marble – made of calcite or dolomite from limestone or

dolostone• Quartzite

– made of quartz from quartz sandstone• Greenstone

– made of green mafic igneous rock• Hornfels

– results from contact metamorphism• Anthracite

– made of black lustrous carbon from coal

Page 67: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Common Metamorphic Rocks

Slate Schist

Gneiss Marble Quartzite

Page 68: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Plate Tectonics and the Rock Cycle

• The atmosphere, hydrosphere and biosphere – act on earth materials – and cause weathering erosion and deposition

• Earth’s internal heat – aids melting and metamorphism

• Plate tectonics recycles Earth materials– heat and pressure at convergent plate boundaries

• lead to metamorphism and igneous activity– resulting deformation makes mountains

• that in turn weather and erode to form sediment

Page 69: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Earth Materials and Historical Geology

• Our record of Earth’s history – is preserved in rocks

• Sedimentary rocks are especially useful – in preserving a historical record – and will be covered in more detail later in the term

• Igneous rocks reveal much – about the history of plate activity

• Metamorphic rocks provide information – about processes deep in the crust

Page 70: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Summary• Elements consist of atoms,

– which have a nucleus • of protons and neutrons

– surrounded by orbiting electrons in shells• The number of protons = the atomic number • and the number of protons + neutrons = the

atomic mass number• Bonding of atoms occurs

– by transfer of electrons to make ions • ionic bonding

– or by sharing electrons • covalent bonding

Page 71: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Summary• Most minerals are compounds

– of two or more elements bonded together• The most common minerals are silicates,

• which contain silicon and oxygen, – but carbonate minerals,

• with carbon and oxygen – are abundant in some rocks

• Two broad groups of igneous rocks – are intrusive (or plutonic) – and extrusive (or volcanic)

• Igneous rocks are classified primarily – by composition and texture

Page 72: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Summary

• Sedimentary rocks also have two broad groups– detrital,

• which consist of solid particles of preexisting rocks, – and chemical/biochemical,

• which consist of minerals derived • by inorganic or organic (involving organisms)

processes

• Compaction and cementation – transform sediment into sedimentary rock, – in a process called lithification

Page 73: Earth Materials— Minerals and Rocks

Summary• Metamorphic rocks form

– when composition and/or texture – of another rock changes – by heat, pressure and fluid activity

• Metamorphism imparts a foliation – to many rocks,

• which is a parallel alignment of minerals• Some metamorphic rocks have a mosaic

– of equidimensional minerals – and are nonfoliated

• Texture or composition – are the primary considerations – in classifying many metamorphic rocks