Mineral Groups and Their Characteristics

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29 Terms

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Mineral

Naturally occurring inorganic solid with a defined composition.

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Organic vs inorganic

Organic contains carbon; inorganic does not.

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Gem

Precious or semi-precious stone, often cut and polished.

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Luster

Appearance of light reflected from a mineral's surface.

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Streak

Color of a mineral's powder when scraped.

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Opaque

Material that does not allow light to pass through.

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Translucent

Material that allows some light to pass through.

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Transparent

Material that allows light to pass through clearly.

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Crystal habit

External shape of a crystal as it grows.

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Mohs hardness scale

Scale from 1 to 10 measuring mineral hardness.

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Tenacity

Resistance of a mineral to breaking or deforming.

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Fracture

Irregular breakage of a mineral without cleavage.

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Conchoidal fracture

Smooth, curved surfaces resembling a shell.

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Cleavage

Tendency of a mineral to break along flat planes.

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Specific gravity

Ratio of a mineral's density to water's density.

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Silicates

Most common mineral group, containing silicon and oxygen.

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Silicon-oxygen tetrahedron

Fundamental building block of silicate minerals.

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Light silicates

Minerals lighter in color and less dense.

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Feldspar

Most common mineral in Earth's crust, contains K.

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Quartz

Second most common silicate, made of Si and O.

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Muscovite

Mica with one-directional cleavage, used in cosmetics.

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Dark silicates

Minerals darker and denser than light silicates.

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Olivine Group

High-temperature silicates, black to olive green.

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Pyroxene Group

Diverse minerals in dark igneous rocks, e.g., augite.

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Amphibole Group

Includes hornblende, forms elongated crystals.

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Biotite

Iron-rich mica with excellent one-directional cleavage.

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Non-silicate minerals

Grouped by anion present or single elements.

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Non-renewable resources

Resources formed slowly, taking millions of years.

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Renewable resources

Resources replenished over relatively short time spans.