Title: Properties of Minerals
1Properties of Minerals
2What is a Mineral?
Minerals are formed in nature.
Minerals are solids.
Minerals have a crystalline, geometric structure.
Minerals are inorganic not made from a living
thing.
3Major Properties
- Color come in many different colors
- Luster the way a surface reflects light
- Streak the color of a mineral in powder form
- Cleavage the tendency of a mineral to break
along flat surfaces - Fracture the tendency of a mineral to break
unevenly along curved or irregular surfaces - Hardness a minerals resistance to being
scratched - Density ratio of mass to volume
4Color
- Impurities and other factors can give minerals
their color
These minerals are ALL forms of quartz! Color is
not a reliable way to describe minerals.
5Color
- Exposure to weather or chemicals may change the
color of minerals.
Pyrite turns grey and black.
Oxidation turns iron from silver to black to red!
Copper turns green!
Color is not a reliable property to use in the
identification of minerals!
6Color
Amethyst 68.00
Tanzanite 720.00
Sapphire 500.00
Diamond 3,000.00
Moissanite 349.oo
REAL Gold
7Luster
- plastic, dull, metallic, waxy, pearly, glassy,
silky
pearly
waxy
metallic
metallic
dull
glassy, vitreous
resinous, plastic
silky, fibrous
8Streak
- Powder made from rubbing a mineral across a
streak plate
Galena
Pyrite
Hematite
9Cleavage
- Minerals that break along even lines have
cleavage.
10Types of Cleavage
11Fracture
- break along curved or irregular surfaces
Conchoidal, shell-shaped
fibrous
irregular
12Hardness
- Hardness can be measured using a scratch test
- using Mohs Hardness Scale, which compares
minerals to each other - using common items such as a fingernail, copper
penny, steel knife blade, glass
A fingernail can scratch talc.
Quartz can scratch glass, but fluorite cannot.
13Density
- How much matter there is in a given space
- Density Mass divided by Volume
volume
mass
14Special Properties
Radioactivity
Chemical Reaction
Magnetism
Salty Taste But NEVER taste things in the lab!
Double Image
Fluorescence