VOCABULARY
mineral p. 471
element p. 473
crystal p. 474
BEFORE, you learned
Earth is made of layers
Earth’s outermost rocky layer
is the crust
NOW, you will learn
•What the characteristics of
minerals are
How minerals are classified
into groups
Which mineral group is
most common
KEY CONCEPT
Minerals are all
around us.
EXPLORE Minerals
What are some characteristics of a mineral?
PROCEDURE
Sprinkle some table salt on a sheet of
colored paper. Look at a few grains of the
salt through a magnifying glass. Then rub
a few grains between your fingers.
In your notebook, describe all the qualities
of the salt that you observe.
Examine the rock salt in the same way
and describe its qualities in your notebook.
How do the two differ?
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Salt is a mineral. From your observations
of salt, what do you think are some
characteristics of minerals?
3
2
1
MATERIALS
•colored paper
•table salt
•rock salt
•magnifying
glass
Chapter 14: Minerals 471
Minerals have four characteristics.
You use minerals all the time. Every time you turn on a microwave
oven or a TV, you depend on minerals. The copper in the wires that
carry electricity to the device is a mineral. Table salt, or halite
(HAYL-YT), is another mineral that you use in your everyday life.
Minerals have four characteristics. A is a substance that
forms in nature
is a solid
has a definite chemical makeup
has a crystal structure
mineral
VOCABULARY
Add a description wheel for
mineral in your notebook.
Page 1 of 6
You might think that minerals and rocks are the same things. But
a mineral must have the four characteristics listed on page 471. A rock
has only two of these characteristics—it is a solid and it forms naturally.
A rock usually contains two or more types of minerals.
Two samples of the same type of rock may vary greatly in the
amounts of different minerals they contain. Minerals, however, are
always made up of the same materials in the same proportions. A ruby
is a mineral. Therefore, a ruby found in India has the same makeup
as a ruby found in Australia.
check your reading How are minerals different from rocks?
Formed in Nature
Minerals are formed by natural processes. Every type of mineral can
form in nature by processes that do not involve living organisms. As
you will read, a few minerals can also be produced by organisms as
part of their shells or bones.
Minerals form in many ways. The mineral halite, which is used as
table salt, forms when water evaporates in a hot, shallow part of the
ocean, leaving behind the salt it contained. Many types of minerals,
including the ones in granite, develop when molten rock cools. Talc,
a mineral that can be used to make baby powder, forms deep in Earth
as high pressure and temperature cause changes in solid rock.
reading tip
Molten rock refers to rock
that has become so hot that
it has melted.
472 Unit 4: Earth’s Surface
Minerals in Rocks
Most rocks are made up of minerals.
reading tip
Proportions show
relationships between
amounts. For example, a
quartz crystal always has
two oxygen atoms for
every silicon atom.
granite
Quartz
Mica
Feldspar
This piece of granite contains the
minerals quartz, feldspar, and mica.
Page 2 of 6
How do the diagrams show that copper consists of only one element
and halite is a compound?
Chapter 14: Minerals 473
Solid
A mineral is a solid—that is, it has a definite volume and a rigid
shape. Volume refers to the amount of space an object takes up.
For example, a golf ball has a smaller volume than a baseball, and a
baseball has a smaller volume than a basketball.
A substance that is a liquid or a gas is not a mineral. However, in
some cases its solid form is a mineral. For instance, liquid water is not
a mineral, but ice is.
Definite Chemical Makeup
Each mineral has a definite chemical makeup: it consists of a specific
combination of atoms of certain elements. An is a substance
that contains only one type of atom. In turn, an atom is the smallest
particle an element can be divided into.
Everything you can see or touch is made up of atoms. Some
substances, including the minerals gold and copper, consist of just
one element. All the atoms in gold or copper are of the same type.
However, most substances contain atoms of more than one element.
Most minerals are compounds, substances consisting of several
elements in specific proportions. Halite, for example, has one atom
of sodium for every atom of chlorine.
The types of atoms that make up a mineral are part of what makes
the mineral unique. The way in which the atoms are bonded, or joined
together, is also important. As you will read, many properties of minerals
are related to how strong or weak the bonds are.
element
Atoms in Minerals
The mineral copper is
made up only of copper
atoms.
The mineral halite is
made up of equal num-
bers of sodium and
chlorine atoms.
copper halite
Atoms in Copper Atoms in Halite
copper
sodium
chlorine
reading tip
You may remember
compound from compound
words—words formed by
joining together smaller
words: note + book =
notebook. Likewise, a
chemical compound has
two or more elements
joined together.
Page 3 of 6
How do crystals differ in shape?
PROCEDURE
Cut sheets of paper so that they fit inside the pie plates as shown. Place one
sheet in each pie plate.
Add the table salt to 30 mL of water in the cup. Stir the water until the salt
has dissolved.
Pour enough salt solution into one of the pie plates to completely cover the
paper with a small film of liquid. Be careful not to pour into the plate any
undissolved salt that may be in the bottom of the cup.
Repeat steps 2 and 3 with the Epsom salts. Let the plates dry overnight.
WHAT DO YOU THINK?
Compare and describe the shapes of the crystals.
What do you think accounts for any differences you observe?
CHALLENGE Why are the shapes of the crystals
the same as or different from the shapes
in the materials you started with?
4
3
2
1
Crystal Shape
Crystal Shape
SKILL FOCUS
Observing
MATERIALS
•tablespoon
•2 mixing cups
•2 stirring rods
•1 tbs table salt
•1 tbs Epsom salts
60 mL water
•2 pie plates
•2 sheets black
paper
scissors
TIME
20 minutes
for setup
474 Unit 4: Earth’s Surface
Crystal Structure
If you look closely at the particles of ice that make up frost, you will
notice that they have smooth, flat surfaces. These flat surfaces form
because of the arrangement of atoms in the ice, which is a mineral.
Such an internal arrangement is a characteristic of minerals. It is the
structure of a a solid in which the atoms are arranged in an
orderly, repeating three-dimensional pattern.
Each mineral has its own type of crystal structure. In some cases,
two minerals have the same chemical composition but different
crystal structures. For example, both diamond and graphite consist of
just one element—carbon. But the arrangements of the carbon atoms
in these two minerals are not the same, so they have different crystal
structures and very different properties. Diamonds are extremely hard
and have a brilliant sparkle. Graphite is soft, gray, and dull.
In nature, a perfect crystal is rare. One can grow only when a
mineral is free to form in an open space—a condition that rarely
exists within Earths crust. The photographs on page 475 show exam-
ples of nearly perfect crystals. The amount of space available for
growth influences the shape and size of crystals. Most crystals have
imperfect shapes because their growth was limited by other crystals
forming next to them.
crystal,
VISUALIZATION
CLASSZONE.COM
Explore an animation of
crystal growth.
Page 4 of 6
Chapter 14: Minerals 475
Minerals are grouped according to
composition.
Scientists classify minerals into groups on the basis of their chemical
makeups. The most common group is the silicates. All the minerals
in this group contain oxygen and silicon—the two most common
elements in Earths crust—joined together.
Though there are thousands of different minerals, only about 30 are
common in Earths crust. These 30 minerals make up most rocks in the
crust. For that reason, they are called rock-forming minerals. Silicates,
which make up about 90 percent of the rocks in Earths crust, are the
most common rock-forming minerals. Quartz, feldspar, and mica
(MY-kuh) are common silicates.
check your reading Which mineral group do most rock-forming minerals belong to?
SUPPORTING MAIN IDEAS
Enter this blue heading
in a chart and record
supporting information.
Crystal groups are named by their shapes and the angles formed
by imaginary lines through their centers. Crystals take many
shapes, but all belong to these six groups.
Crystal Groups
Cubic Tetragonal Hexagonal
Orthorhombic Monoclinic Triclinic
galena wulfenite beryl
topaz gypsum microcline
Page 5 of 6
476 Unit 4: Earth’s Surface
KEY CONCEPTS
1. What are the four character-
istics of a mineral?
2. On what basis do scientists
classify minerals?
3. What is the most common
group of minerals? What
percentage of the crust do
they make up?
CRITICAL THINKING
4. Classify Can oil and natural
gas be classified as minerals?
Why or why not?
5. Apply When a piece of
quartz is heated to a very high
temperature, it melts into a
liquid. Is it still a mineral?
Why or why not?
CHALLENGE
6. Interpret You can see perfect
crystals lining the inside of
certain rocks when they are
broken open. How do you
think the crystals were able
to form?
The second most common group of rock-forming minerals is the
carbonates. All the minerals in this group contain carbon and oxygen
joined together. Calcite (KAL-SYT), which is common in seashells, is
a carbonate mineral.
There are many other mineral groups. All are important, even
though their minerals may not be as common as rock-forming minerals.
For instance, the mineral group known as oxides contains the minerals
from which most metals, such as tin and copper, are refined. An oxide
consists of an element, usually a metal, joined to oxygen. This group
includes hematite (HEE-muh-TYT), a source of iron.
check your reading Why is the oxide mineral group important?
RESOURCE CENTER
CLASSZONE.COM
Find information on
minerals.
Common Elements of Earth’s Crust
Source: Brian Mason,
Principles of Geochemistry
Aluminum 8.1%
Other 9.0%
Iron 5.0%
Calcium 3.6%
Oxygen
46.6%
Silicon
27.7%
How much of Earth’s crust is made
up of oxygen and silicon?
The sand on many
beaches consists mainly
of quartz, an important
silicate mineral.
Page 6 of 6