💎Mineralogy Unit 1 – Introduction to Mineralogy and Earth Materials
Minerals are the building blocks of Earth's crust, forming naturally as inorganic, crystalline solids with specific chemical compositions. They combine to create rocks and are classified based on their unique properties, including crystal structure, symmetry, and physical characteristics like hardness and cleavage.
Understanding minerals is crucial for geologists, as they provide insights into Earth's history and processes. From common rock-forming minerals like quartz and feldspar to economically important ores and gemstones, minerals play vital roles in both natural systems and human industries.
Minerals defined as naturally occurring, inorganic, crystalline solids with a specific chemical composition and ordered atomic structure
Rocks composed of one or more minerals (granite, basalt, limestone)
Crystals have a regular, repeating pattern of atoms in three dimensions
Symmetry describes the balanced arrangement of faces, edges, and corners in a crystal
Polymorphism occurs when a chemical compound exists in more than one crystal structure (graphite and diamond)
Solid solution involves the substitution of one element for another in a mineral's structure without changing the crystal structure
Isomorphism occurs when two or more elements freely substitute for each other in a mineral's structure
Complete solid solution series can exist between end-member compositions (olivine series)
Crystal Structure and Symmetry
Crystal systems categorize minerals based on the symmetry of their unit cell (cubic, tetragonal, hexagonal, trigonal, orthorhombic, monoclinic, triclinic)
Unit cell represents the smallest repeating unit that defines the crystal structure
Bravais lattices describe the 14 unique ways points can be arranged in three-dimensional space
Miller Indices (hkl) describe the orientation of planes within a crystal using reciprocals of intercepts
Point groups represent the complete set of symmetry operations that leave at least one point in the crystal unchanged
Space groups combine point group symmetry with translational symmetry elements (screw axes and glide planes)
230 unique space groups exist in three dimensions
Twinning occurs when two or more crystals of the same mineral intergrow in a specific orientation (plagioclase feldspars)
Physical Properties of Minerals
Color influenced by the presence of transition metal ions, impurities, or structural defects (quartz varieties)
Streak, the color of a mineral's powdered form, is more reliable than surface color for identification
Luster describes the appearance of a mineral's surface in reflected light (metallic, submetallic, non-metallic)
Hardness measures a mineral's resistance to scratching, quantified by the Mohs scale (talc to diamond)
Cleavage forms when minerals break along planes of weak bonding, producing smooth, flat surfaces (mica, feldspar)
Fracture describes the texture of broken mineral surfaces not along cleavage planes (conchoidal, uneven, splintery)
Chemical sedimentary rocks form from the precipitation of minerals from solution (limestone, chert, rock salt)
Metamorphic minerals form when pre-existing rocks undergo changes in temperature, pressure, and/or chemical environment without melting (garnet, kyanite, sillimanite, staurolite)
Contact metamorphism occurs when rocks are heated by nearby magmatic intrusions (hornfels)