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minerals and geology

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Question
Answer
What is a mineral?   A naturally occurring, inorganic solid that has a definite chemical composition and a characteristic crystalline structure.  
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What is the study of minerals?   mineralogy  
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How do scientists determine if a substance is a mineral?   Is the substance natural? Is the substance organic? Is the substance a crystalline solid at temperatures near the earth's surface? Does the substance have a definite chemical composition?  
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What form do minerals always exist in?   Solid form  
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What is a crystalline solid?   A solid whose particles are arranged in a regular, repeating, three dimensional pattern.  
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What is chemical composition?   The relative abundance of the different types of atoms in a substance.  
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Elements consist of how many atoms?   One kind.  
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Compounds consist of how many elements?   More than one element.  
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What is an example of a native element?   gold  
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What is an example of a compound?   Fluorite  
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How are minerals classified?   Silicate minerals and nonsilicate minerals  
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What are silicate minerals?   Minerals that contain a combination of silicon and oxygen.  
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What is 96% of the earths crust made from?   Silicate minerals  
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What is the most common silicate minerals in the earth's crust?   Feldspar minerals  
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What is the most common mineral found in sand?   Quartz  
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What are some examples of silicate minerals?   Mica, Talc  
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What is the softest known mineral?   Talc  
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What are nonsilicate minerals?   Minerals that do not contain an combination of silicon and oxygen.  
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What are the categories of nonsilicate minerals?   Native elements, carbonates, halides, oxides, sulfates and sulfides.  
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What are native elements?   Elements made from only one element.  
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What are some examples of native elements?   Gold, silver, and copper and sulfar  
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What makes up a carbonate mineral?   combinations of carbon and oxygen  
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What are some examples of carbonates?   Limestone, shells of marine oysters, cement  
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What is another name for rock salt?   Halite  
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What are oxides?   Compounds that contain oxygen and one other element.  
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What two elements make up sulfates?   Sulfar and oxygen and one or more metals.  
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What is an example of a sulfide?   Pyrite  
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What are the properties used to identify a mineral?   By color, luster, streak, hardness, density, cleavage, and fracture.  
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How many properties do you need to use to identify a mineral?   At least two.  
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What is luster?   The way a mineral's surface reflects light.  
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What is hardness?   The minerals resistance to being scratched.  
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What is the scale commonly used to measure hardness?   Mohs Hardness Scale  
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If minerals in the Mohs scale is not available then what scale could be used?   Field Hardness Scale  
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What is a streak?   The color of the powder left by a mineral when it is rubbed against a hard, rough surface.  
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How is the streak of a mineral observed?   With a streak plate  
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What is the difference between cleavage and fracture?   Cleavage splits along sets of parallel, flat surfaces and fractures split irregularly.  
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What are some other properties that are used to identify some minerals?   Taste, smell, magnetism, glow in ultraviolet light, feel, and radioactivity.  
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What are some actual minerals used by people frequently?   Salt, gold, silver, copper, aluminum, iron  
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What is malleability?   A substance's ability to be shaped or formed by hammering or pressure.  
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What is a malleable metal?   Aluminum, gold, silver,copper  
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What is ductility?   A substances ability to be drawn or pulled into wire.  
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What is ore?   A naturally occurring rock from which a useful metal or mineral is recovered.  
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What was the first alloy discovered?   Bronze  
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What is a rock?   A hard substance composed of one or more minerals.  
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What are the three main types of rock?   Igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic.  
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What are igneous rocks formed from?   Cooled and hardened magma or lava.  
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What is magma?   melted rock beneath the earth's surface.  
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What is lava?   Magma that has reached the earth's surface.  
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What are igneous rocks classified on?   The basis of their mineral content and their texture.  
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What are felsic rocks?   Light-colored, light-weight igneous rocks that are rich in silicon, aluminum, sodium and potasium.  
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What are mafic rocks?   Dark colored, heavy igneous rocks that are rich in iron, magnesium, and calcium.  
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What are intrusive rocks?   Igneous rocks formed when magma cools beneath the earth's surface.  
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What are extrusive rocks?   Igneous rocks formed when lava cools on the Earth's surface.  
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What are sediments?   Particles of minerals, rock fragments, shells, leaves, bones and other remains of once living things.  
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How are sedimentary rocks formed?   From sediments that have been compacted adn cemented together.  
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What does lithification mean?   To turn into stone.  
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What happens during cementation?   The water carries dissolved minerals through sediments and leaves these minerals in the spaces between the sediments, gluing them together.  
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What happens during compaction?   Pressure pushes the sediments together, squeezing air and water out the spaces between the fragments.  
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What distinguishes a sedimentary rock from other rocks?   Their layers, also known as beds.  
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What are clastic rocks?   Sedimentary rocks made of rock particles and fragments deposited by water, wind or ice.  
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What is a conglomerate rock?   A clastic rock composed of rounded, pebble-sized rock fragments.  
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What are some examples of clastic rocks?   Sandstone and Shale  
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What is the most common sedimentary rock?   Shale  
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What is coal made from?   Organic sedimentary rock made of carbon from ancient plant remains.  
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Would you be more likely to find a fosil in an igneous rock or a sedimentary rock?   In a sedimentary rock because they are formed on the earth's surface.  
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Where does Breccia rock form?   At the base of steep cliffs.  
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What is metamorphism?   The process of change in the structure and constitution of a rock.  
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What are metamorphic rocks?   Rocks formed when the structure and constitution of existing rocks change due to heat, pressure and/or chemical reactions.  
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What type of rocks can metamorphic rocks form from?   Any type of rock.  
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What is contact metamorphism?   It occurs when the heat of magma invades existing rocks.  
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What is regional metamorphism?   It occurs when large pieces of the Earth's crust rub against each other, causing heat and pressure that change existing rocks.  
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What is foliated structure?   A rock with visible layers or bands aligned in planes.  
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What are three common metamorphic rocks with a foliated structure?   Slate, Schist, and gneiss.  
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What is an example of a rock with nonfoliated structure?   Marble  
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