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Identify the Minerals ight 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?
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Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

Identify the Minerals

© Copyright 2005.  M. J. Krech. All rights reserved.

Can you identify these minerals?

Page 2: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

1. What is this mineral?

Properties:

• Hardness: 5 - 6• Luster: Earthy, nonmetallic    (but sometimes metallic)• Streak: Red• Color: Steel-gray, red,

reddish-brown, or black• Breakage: Fracture

Page 3: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

1. This mineral is Hematite.

• Source of red pigments

in paint

• Important iron ore

• Named from the Greek word for blood

Page 4: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

2. What is this mineral?

Properties:

•Hardness: 3.5-5.5•Luster: Resinous,    nonmetallic•Streak: yellow-brown•Color: yellow, brown, red,    green, black and    sometimes gray•Breakage: Fracture

Page 5: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

2. This mineral is Sphalerite.• A principal source

of zinc • Sometimes called

Zincblende• Often associated

with galena deposits• Difficult for miners

to distinguish from galena, so they named it sphalerite which is Greek for treacherous rock

Page 6: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

3. What is this mineral?

Properties:

•Cleavage: cubic•Hardness: 2.5•Very heavy•Luster: Metallic•Color: Lead to silver gray•Streak: Lead gray

Page 7: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

3. This mineral is Galena.

• Most important ore of lead

• Used in X-ray shield aprons

• Associated with pyrite and chalcopyrite

• Some Galena may contain up to 1% silver in place of lead

Page 8: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

4. What is this mineral?Properties:

• Color: white to green to gray

• Hardness: 1     (softest mineral on Moh’s scale)

• Streak: Wwhite

• Breakage: Perfect basal cleavage

• Luster: Nonmetallic - waxy or pearly

• Special Property: soapy feel

Page 9: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

4. This mineral is Talc.

• Uses: heat-resistant science lab countertops, paints, insecticides

• A specimen of what looks like a milky quartz will be a big surprise when it has a soapy feel and can be scratched by a fingernail!

Page 10: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

5. What is this mineral?

Properties:

• Color: Colorless or tinted gray, brown, yellow, green, or rarely, red or violet

• Hardness: 2 - 2.5

• Streak: White

• Breakage: Perfect basal cleavage - splits into thin sheets

• Luster: Nonmetallic - vitreous, pearly

Page 11: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

5. This mineral is Mica.• Also called: Muscovite

• Uses: fireproofing, lubricant, old-fashioned wood stove windows

• Sheets of muscovite have high heat and electrical insulating properties and are used to make electrical components

Page 12: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

6. What is this mineral?

• Color: Yellow-brown to dark brown

• Streak: Brownish yellow to yellow

• Luster: Nonmetallic - Earthy (dull)

• Hardness: 4 - 5.5• Breakage: Fracture

Page 13: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

6. This mineral is Limonite.

• Important source of iron

• Associated with hematite, another iron ore

Page 14: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

7. What is this mineral?

Properties:

• Color: Usually white

• Hardness: 1.5 - 2

• Streak: White

• Breakage: Basal cleavage

• Luster: Nonmetallic -      Earthy (dull)

Page 15: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

• Source of clay for ceramics

• Used in toothpaste and medicine

7. This mineral is Kaolinite.

Page 16: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

8. What is this mineral?Properties:

• Color: Clear if no impurities, then pink, gray, purple, yellow, green, brown, orange

• Hardness: 7

• Streak: White

• Breakage: Conchoidal Fracture

• Luster: Nonmetallic - Vitreous

Page 17: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

8. This mineral is Quartz.

• Uses: lenses, glass, digital watches, sandpaper

• Quartz crystals often line the interior of a Geode

Page 18: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

9. What mineral is this?Properties:

• Color: white, gray, yellow, red, orange, and rarely, green

• Hardness: 6

• Streak: White

• Breakage: Cleavage

• Luster: Nonmetallic -      vitreous to pearly

Page 19: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

9. This mineral is Feldspar.

•Used in the manufacture of porcelain, and scouring powder

      

•When pearly - called Moonstone  and used in jewelry

Page 20: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

10. What mineral is this?

Properties:

• Color: White to gray to pink

• Hardness: 1.5 - 2

• Streak: White

• Breakage: Conchoidal Fracture, sometimes fibrous

• Luster: Nonmetallic -       vitreous to silky to pearly

Page 21: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

10. This mineral is Gypsum.

• Used to make blackboard chalk, toothpaste, surgical casts, plaster of Paris, and drywall

Page 22: Identify the Minerals © Copyright 2005. M. J. Krech. All rights reserved. Can you identify these minerals?

The End• Your house came from

a mine!

• If it can’t be grown, it must be mined!

• List 10 things in your house that originally came from a mine.

© Copyright 2005.  M. J. Krech. All rights reserved.