101
1 2
3 4
1 cm
1 cm
1 cm
1 cm
How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____
List the number of different minerals in the sample
and give a description of each one.
How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____
List the number of different minerals in the sample
and give a description of each one:
How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____
List the number of different minerals in the sample
and give a description of each one:
How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____
List the number of different minerals in the sample
and give a description of each one:
B. Which of these samples seems to have crystals of a valuable
chemical element? _______ What element? _______
C. rEFLECT & DISCUSS Based on your observations in this
activity—what is a rock, and how are rocks related to minerals
and crystals?
A c t i v i t Y 3.1 Mineral and rock Inquiry
Name: ______________________________________
Course/Section: ______________________ Date:
___________
A. All of the samples below are rocks from Earth’s crust.
Record how many crystals you see in each sample (Write 1, 2,
3, or
many). Then make a numbered list of how many different kinds
of minerals are in the sample and describe each one in your
own words. Complete parts B and C.
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102
A. Indicate whether the luster of each of the following materials
looks metallic (M) or nonmetallic (NM):
1. a mirror: __________ 2. butter: __________ 3. ice:
__________ 4. a rusty nail: __________
B. What is the streak color (i.e., color in powdered form) of
each of the following substances?
1. salt: ________________ 2. wheat: _________________ 3.
pencil lead: ____________________
C. What is the crystal form (FIGURE 3.4) of the:
1. quartz in FIGURE 3.1B? __________________ 2. native
copper in FIGURE 3.6? __________________
D. Look up quartz in the Mineral Database (FIGURE 3.21, page
93) to find a list of the varieties (var.) of quartz. Then identify
each quartz variety below, and write its name beneath the
image.
var. _________________ var. _________________ var.
_________________ var. _________________
E. A mineral can be scratched by a masonry nail or knife blade
but not by a wire (iron) nail (FIGURE 3.9).
1. Is this mineral hard or soft? _______________
2. What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale?
__________
3. What mineral on Mohs Scale has such a hardness?
____________________
F. A mineral can scratch calcite, and it can be scratched by a
wire (iron) nail.
1. What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale?
__________
2. Which mineral on Mohs Scale has this hardness?
____________________
G. The brassy, opaque, metallic mineral in FIGURE 3.7A is the
same as the mineral in FIGURE 3.8. What is this mineral’s
hardness,
and how can you tell?
H. Analyze the mineral samples and figure caption in
FIGURE 3.16.
1. What is this mineral’s hardness
(give a number or range of numbers)?
_____________________________
2. Very carefully cut out the cleavage goniometer from
GeoTools Sheet 1 at the back of this manual. Be sure to cut the
angles as exactly as possible. Sketch the characteristic shape
that this mineral breaks into. Using the cleavage goniometer,
measure the angles between flat flat cleavage surfaces of this
mineral in FIGURE 3.16, and record the angles here:
What is the name of this kind of cleavage?
I. A mineral sample weighs 27 grams and takes up 10.4 cubic
centimeters
of space. What is the SG (specific gravity) of this mineral?
Show your work.
A c t i v i t Y 3.2 Mineral Properties and Crystals
Name: ______________________________________
Course/Section: ______________________ Date:
___________
M03_AGI4511_01_SE_C03.indd 102 12/10/13 1:54 PM
103
0.1 mm
J. Analyze these two photomicrographs of ice crystals
(snowflakes) by William Bentley.
1. Based on FIGURE 3.4, what is the crystal form of the
top crystal?
2. Notice that the crystals are symmetrical, but not
exactly. Imperfections are common in crystals, but
their underlying crystal form can still be detected.
To what crystal system in FIGURE 3.5 do ice crystals
belong? How can you tell?
3. rEFLECT & DISCUSS The habit of snowflakes
(crystals of water ice) includes a variety of different
crystal forms. Why don’t all snowflakes have the same
crystal form?
K. Analyze each crystalline household material pictured below
and identify which crystal system it belongs to. (Use a hand
lens
or microscope to observe actual samples of the materials if they
are available.)
1
cm
Sucrose Epsomite Halite
1
cm
1. Sucrose (table sugar) belongs to the
_________________________________________ crystal
system.
How can you tell?
2. Epsomite (epsom salt) belongs to the
_________________________________________ crystal
system.
How can you tell?
3. Halite (table salt) belongs to the
__________________________________________ crystal
system.
How can you tell?
4. rEFLECT & DISCUSS Which of these crystalline household
materials (sucrose, epsomite, or halite) cannot be a
mineral? Why not?
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2.1
2.6–2.7
3.0–3.3
3.5–4.3
4.4–4.6
4.9–5.2
7.4–7.6
8.8–9.0
10.5
19.3
Sulfur
Quartz
Fluorite
Garnet
Barite
Pyrite
Galena
Native copper
Native silver
Native gold
Sample Mass in
Grams (g)
Volume in
Cubic cm
(cm3)
Specific
Gravity
(SG)
Mineral Name
SG OF SOME MINERALS
104
A c t i v i t Y 3.3 Determining Specific Gravity (SG)
Name: ______________________________________
Course/Section: ______________________ Date:
___________
A. Imagine that you want to buy a box of breakfast cereal and
get the most cereal for your money. You have narrowed your
search to two brands of cereal that are sold in boxes of the exact
same size and price. The boxes are made of opaque cardboard
and have no labeling of weight. Without opening them, how can
you tell which box contains the most cereal?
B. Like the cereal boxes above, equal-sized samples of different
minerals often have different weights. If you hold a mineral
sample in one hand and an equal-sized sample of a different
mineral in the other hand, then it is possible to act like a human
balance and detect that one may be heavier than the other. This
is called hefting, and it is used to estimate the relative
densities of two objects. Heft the three mineral samples
provided to you, then write sample numbers/letters on the lines
below
to indicate the sample densities from least dense to most dense.
(Least dense) ______________ _______________
_______________ (Most dense)
C. In more exact terms, density is a measure of an object’s mass
(weighed in grams, g)
divided by its volume (how much space it takes up in cubic
centimeters, cm3).
Scientists use the Greek character rho (ρ) to represent density,
which is always
expressed in g/cm3. What is the density of a box of cereal that
is 20 cm by
25 cm by 5 cm and weighs 0.453 kg? Show your work.
D. Mineralogists compare the relative densities of minerals
according to their specific gravity (SG): the ratio of the density
of
a mineral divided by the density of water. Since water has a
density of 1 g/cm3, and the units cancel out, specific gravity is
the same number as density but without any units. For example,
the density of quartz is 2.6 g/cm3, so the specific gravity of
quartz is 2.6.
Return to the three mineral samples that you hefted above, and
do the following:
1. First (while they are still dry), determine and record the mass
(weight) of each sample
in grams.
2. Use the water displacement method to measure and record the
volume of each sample
(FIGURE 3.15). Recall that one fluid milliliter (mL or ml on the
graduated cylinder)
equals one cubic centimeter.
3. Calculate the specific gravity of each sample.
4. Identify each sample based on the list of specific gravities of
some common minerals.
D. rEFLECT & DISCUSS Were your data and calculations
accurate enough to be useful in identifying the samples? If not,
how could they be made more accurate?
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* Sample D4A:
a gray metallic mineral with cubic cleavage (3 planes of
cleavage at right angles). Hardness is 2.5; streak is gray to dark
gray.
* Sample D4B:
a transparent, prismatic mineral with no cleavage (but
exhibiting conchoidal fracture). Hardness is 7.0, which is too
hard to streak.
* Sample D4C:
a yellow metallic mineral with no cleavage and no conchoidal
fracture. Hardness is 2.5 to 3.0; streak is yellowish.
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* Properties of these samples are listed in the box at right.
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undefined: undefined_2: CourseSection: Date: How many
crystals do you see in this sample: How many crystals do you
see in this sample_2: How many crystals do you see in this
sample_3: How many crystals do you see in this sample_4:
undefined_3: undefined_4: Name_2: CourseSection_2: Date_2:
1 a mirror: 2 butter: 3 ice: 4 a rusty nail: 1 salt: 2 wheat: 3
pencil lead: 1 quartz in FIGURE 31B: native copper in FIGURE
36: var: var_2: var_3: var_4: 1 Is this mineral hard or soft: 2
What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale: 3
What mineral on Mohs Scale has such a hardness: 1 What is the
hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale: 2 Which
mineral on Mohs Scale has this hardness: give a number or
range of numbers: undefined_5: undefined_6: undefined_7:
undefined_8: Determining Specific Gravity SG: Date_3: cm3:
SampleRow1: Mineral NameRow1: SampleRow2: Mineral
NameRow2: Text1: Text2: Text3: Text4: Text5: Text6: Text7:
Text8: Text9: 01 mm: Text10: Text11: Name: Text12: Text13:
 1011 23 41 cm1 cm1 cm1 cmHow many.docx

1011 23 41 cm1 cm1 cm1 cmHow many.docx

  • 1.
    101 1 2 3 4 1cm 1 cm 1 cm 1 cm How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____ List the number of different minerals in the sample and give a description of each one. How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____ List the number of different minerals in the sample and give a description of each one: How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____ List the number of different minerals in the sample and give a description of each one: How many crystals do you see in this sample? _____ List the number of different minerals in the sample and give a description of each one: B. Which of these samples seems to have crystals of a valuable chemical element? _______ What element? _______
  • 2.
    C. rEFLECT &DISCUSS Based on your observations in this activity—what is a rock, and how are rocks related to minerals and crystals? A c t i v i t Y 3.1 Mineral and rock Inquiry Name: ______________________________________ Course/Section: ______________________ Date: ___________ A. All of the samples below are rocks from Earth’s crust. Record how many crystals you see in each sample (Write 1, 2, 3, or many). Then make a numbered list of how many different kinds of minerals are in the sample and describe each one in your own words. Complete parts B and C. M03_AGI4511_01_SE_C03.indd 101 12/10/13 1:54 PM cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil 102 A. Indicate whether the luster of each of the following materials looks metallic (M) or nonmetallic (NM): 1. a mirror: __________ 2. butter: __________ 3. ice:
  • 3.
    __________ 4. arusty nail: __________ B. What is the streak color (i.e., color in powdered form) of each of the following substances? 1. salt: ________________ 2. wheat: _________________ 3. pencil lead: ____________________ C. What is the crystal form (FIGURE 3.4) of the: 1. quartz in FIGURE 3.1B? __________________ 2. native copper in FIGURE 3.6? __________________ D. Look up quartz in the Mineral Database (FIGURE 3.21, page 93) to find a list of the varieties (var.) of quartz. Then identify each quartz variety below, and write its name beneath the image. var. _________________ var. _________________ var. _________________ var. _________________ E. A mineral can be scratched by a masonry nail or knife blade but not by a wire (iron) nail (FIGURE 3.9). 1. Is this mineral hard or soft? _______________ 2. What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale? __________ 3. What mineral on Mohs Scale has such a hardness? ____________________ F. A mineral can scratch calcite, and it can be scratched by a wire (iron) nail. 1. What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale?
  • 4.
    __________ 2. Which mineralon Mohs Scale has this hardness? ____________________ G. The brassy, opaque, metallic mineral in FIGURE 3.7A is the same as the mineral in FIGURE 3.8. What is this mineral’s hardness, and how can you tell? H. Analyze the mineral samples and figure caption in FIGURE 3.16. 1. What is this mineral’s hardness (give a number or range of numbers)? _____________________________ 2. Very carefully cut out the cleavage goniometer from GeoTools Sheet 1 at the back of this manual. Be sure to cut the angles as exactly as possible. Sketch the characteristic shape that this mineral breaks into. Using the cleavage goniometer, measure the angles between flat flat cleavage surfaces of this mineral in FIGURE 3.16, and record the angles here: What is the name of this kind of cleavage? I. A mineral sample weighs 27 grams and takes up 10.4 cubic centimeters of space. What is the SG (specific gravity) of this mineral? Show your work. A c t i v i t Y 3.2 Mineral Properties and Crystals Name: ______________________________________ Course/Section: ______________________ Date: ___________
  • 5.
    M03_AGI4511_01_SE_C03.indd 102 12/10/131:54 PM 103 0.1 mm J. Analyze these two photomicrographs of ice crystals (snowflakes) by William Bentley. 1. Based on FIGURE 3.4, what is the crystal form of the top crystal? 2. Notice that the crystals are symmetrical, but not exactly. Imperfections are common in crystals, but their underlying crystal form can still be detected. To what crystal system in FIGURE 3.5 do ice crystals belong? How can you tell? 3. rEFLECT & DISCUSS The habit of snowflakes (crystals of water ice) includes a variety of different crystal forms. Why don’t all snowflakes have the same crystal form? K. Analyze each crystalline household material pictured below and identify which crystal system it belongs to. (Use a hand lens or microscope to observe actual samples of the materials if they are available.) 1 cm Sucrose Epsomite Halite
  • 6.
    1 cm 1. Sucrose (tablesugar) belongs to the _________________________________________ crystal system. How can you tell? 2. Epsomite (epsom salt) belongs to the _________________________________________ crystal system. How can you tell? 3. Halite (table salt) belongs to the __________________________________________ crystal system. How can you tell? 4. rEFLECT & DISCUSS Which of these crystalline household materials (sucrose, epsomite, or halite) cannot be a mineral? Why not? M03_AGI4511_01_SE_C03.indd 103 12/10/13 1:54 PM cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil
  • 7.
  • 8.
    Garnet Barite Pyrite Galena Native copper Native silver Nativegold Sample Mass in Grams (g) Volume in Cubic cm (cm3) Specific Gravity (SG) Mineral Name SG OF SOME MINERALS 104 A c t i v i t Y 3.3 Determining Specific Gravity (SG) Name: ______________________________________
  • 9.
    Course/Section: ______________________ Date: ___________ A.Imagine that you want to buy a box of breakfast cereal and get the most cereal for your money. You have narrowed your search to two brands of cereal that are sold in boxes of the exact same size and price. The boxes are made of opaque cardboard and have no labeling of weight. Without opening them, how can you tell which box contains the most cereal? B. Like the cereal boxes above, equal-sized samples of different minerals often have different weights. If you hold a mineral sample in one hand and an equal-sized sample of a different mineral in the other hand, then it is possible to act like a human balance and detect that one may be heavier than the other. This is called hefting, and it is used to estimate the relative densities of two objects. Heft the three mineral samples provided to you, then write sample numbers/letters on the lines below to indicate the sample densities from least dense to most dense. (Least dense) ______________ _______________ _______________ (Most dense) C. In more exact terms, density is a measure of an object’s mass (weighed in grams, g) divided by its volume (how much space it takes up in cubic centimeters, cm3). Scientists use the Greek character rho (ρ) to represent density, which is always expressed in g/cm3. What is the density of a box of cereal that is 20 cm by 25 cm by 5 cm and weighs 0.453 kg? Show your work. D. Mineralogists compare the relative densities of minerals according to their specific gravity (SG): the ratio of the density
  • 10.
    of a mineral dividedby the density of water. Since water has a density of 1 g/cm3, and the units cancel out, specific gravity is the same number as density but without any units. For example, the density of quartz is 2.6 g/cm3, so the specific gravity of quartz is 2.6. Return to the three mineral samples that you hefted above, and do the following: 1. First (while they are still dry), determine and record the mass (weight) of each sample in grams. 2. Use the water displacement method to measure and record the volume of each sample (FIGURE 3.15). Recall that one fluid milliliter (mL or ml on the graduated cylinder) equals one cubic centimeter. 3. Calculate the specific gravity of each sample. 4. Identify each sample based on the list of specific gravities of some common minerals. D. rEFLECT & DISCUSS Were your data and calculations accurate enough to be useful in identifying the samples? If not, how could they be made more accurate? M03_AGI4511_01_SE_C03.indd 104 12/10/13 1:54 PM cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil
  • 11.
    cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Text Box * SampleD4A: a gray metallic mineral with cubic cleavage (3 planes of cleavage at right angles). Hardness is 2.5; streak is gray to dark gray. * Sample D4B: a transparent, prismatic mineral with no cleavage (but exhibiting conchoidal fracture). Hardness is 7.0, which is too hard to streak. * Sample D4C: a yellow metallic mineral with no cleavage and no conchoidal fracture. Hardness is 2.5 to 3.0; streak is yellowish. cbentley Text Box * Properties of these samples are listed in the box at right. cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil
  • 12.
    cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley Pencil cbentley PencilUntitled undefined: undefined_2: CourseSection:Date: How many crystals do you see in this sample: How many crystals do you see in this sample_2: How many crystals do you see in this sample_3: How many crystals do you see in this sample_4: undefined_3: undefined_4: Name_2: CourseSection_2: Date_2: 1 a mirror: 2 butter: 3 ice: 4 a rusty nail: 1 salt: 2 wheat: 3 pencil lead: 1 quartz in FIGURE 31B: native copper in FIGURE 36: var: var_2: var_3: var_4: 1 Is this mineral hard or soft: 2 What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale: 3 What mineral on Mohs Scale has such a hardness: 1 What is the hardness number of this mineral on Mohs Scale: 2 Which mineral on Mohs Scale has this hardness: give a number or range of numbers: undefined_5: undefined_6: undefined_7: undefined_8: Determining Specific Gravity SG: Date_3: cm3: SampleRow1: Mineral NameRow1: SampleRow2: Mineral NameRow2: Text1: Text2: Text3: Text4: Text5: Text6: Text7: Text8: Text9: 01 mm: Text10: Text11: Name: Text12: Text13: