Lab 7 Rocks and Minerals Background Information
Lab 7 Rocks and Minerals Background Information
Lab 7 Rocks and Minerals Background Information
In this lab you will learn about rocks and minerals. Minerals are the building
blocks of rocks, and rocks are the building blocks of the Earth's crust. This lab
will introduce you to some of the major rock-forming minerals, and to the three
major groups of rocks - igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic.
BASIC DEFINITIONS
Minerals
Minerals are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Naturally occurring
Inorganic
Solids
Minerals have a definite chemical composition
Minerals have an orderly internal crystal structure
Minerals are the building blocks of rocks. Each mineral has different physical and
chemical properties which allow it to be identified. Physical properties you will
use to identify the minerals include color, hardness, luster, cleavage, magnetism,
reaction to acid, etc.
Rocks
An aggregate of one or more minerals. Rocks are the building blocks of the
Earth's crust. The Earth's continental crust is dominated by granite, and the
oceanic crust is dominated by basalt. Both of these are igneous rocks.
There are three basic categories of rocks:
Color
Hardness
Luster
Cleavage
Quatrz
Colorless,
gray,
white
Harder than
glass
Glassy,
shiny
No
cleavage,
fractures
at
random
Feldspar
White,
pink,
Harder than
glass
Nonmetallic
Has
cleavage,
Reaction
to acid
None
None
gray,
green
breaks
along
fixed
planes
Olivine
Olive
green
Harder than
glass
Glassy
No
cleavage,
fractures
at
random
None
Muscovite
Silvery
Can be
scratched
by
fingernail
Nonmetallic
Has
cleavage,
Splits
into flat
sheets
None
Biotite
Brown,
black
Has
cleavage,
breaks
along
fixed
planes
None
Pyroxene
Green,
black
Less than
finger nail
Nonpmetallic
Has
clevage
None
Calcite
White
Harder than
finger nail
Nonmetallic
Has
cleavage
None
Halite
White
Harder than
Non-
Has
None
finger nail
metallic
cleavage
IGNEOUS ROCKS
Igneous rocks are "fire-formed". They crystallized from hot, molten lava or
magma as it cooled. Magma is hot, molten rock beneath the surface of the Earth.
Lava is hot, molten rock which has flowed out onto the surface of the Earth.
Magma may cool within the earth's crust to form igneous rocks. But lava cools
much more quickly because it is on the Earth's surface where temperatures are
much lower than they are at depth.
Cooling rates influence the texture of the igneous rock:
Igneous rocks are classified or named based on their texture and their
composition. A variety of textures are present in igneous rocks. For this lab, we
will only consider a few: fine-grained (aphanitic), coarse-grained (phaneritic),
glassy, and vesicular.
Use the table below to identify the properties of three igneous rocks.
Rock
Color
Hardness
Luster
Cleavage
Obsidian
Black
Less than
penny
Glassy
None
Pumis
Light
color,
white to
gray
Spongelike. Can
be easily
scratched
Glassy or None
dull
Reaction
to acid
None
None
Vesicular basalt
Light
gray
Harder
than nail
Dull
None
none
SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
Sedimentary rocks are made from sediment. Sediment is loose particulate
material (clay, sand, gravel, etc.)
Sediment becomes sedimentary rock through lithification, which involves:
1. Compaction
2. Cementation
3. Recrystallization (of carbonate sediment)
Use the table below to identify the properties of three sedimentary rocks
Rock
Color
Texture
Luster
Conglomerate
All
colors
and
shades
Rounded
None
grain size
greater
than 2 mm
Breccia
All
colors
and
Angular
grain
Cleavage
None
Glassy or None
dull
Reaction
to acid
None
None
shades
Shale
Light
gray
Harder
than nail
Dull
None
Fizzes
with acid
METAMORPHIC ROCKS
Metamorphism causes changes in the texture and mineralogy of other rocks.
Texture
The processes of compaction and recrystallization change the texture of rocks
during metamorphism.
1. Compaction
o The grains move closer together.
o The rock becomes more dense.
o Porosity is reduced.
o Example: clay to shale to slate
2. Recrystallization
Growth of new crystals. No changes in overall chemistry. New crystals
grow from the minerals already present.
A preferred orientation of minerals commonly develops under applied
pressure. Platy or sheet-like minerals such as muscovite and biotite
become oriented perpendicular to the direction of force. This preferred
orientation is called foliation.
Use the table below to identify the properties of three metamorphic rocks
Rock
Color
Texture
Luster
Cleavage
Slate
Black and
gray
Fine grain
texture
dull
None
Reaction
to acid
None
Gneiss
Alternating
layers of
dark and
light
minerals
Fine grain
texture
Nonmetallic
None
None
Marble
Different
colors
Hardened
limestone
glossy
None
Fizzes
with acid