monday january 3, 2011 (non-silicate minerals; mineral resources)
TRANSCRIPT
MondayJanuary 3, 2011
(Non-Silicate Minerals; Mineral Resources)
The Launch PadMonday, 1/3/11
What is the most common group of
minerals?the silicates
Announcements
Please remember these two important points:
You cannot remediate your semester final exam.
After the first semester ends, you cannot go back and
improve your grade on any six-weeks of the first semester.
Assignment Currently Open Pages Date of Notes
on Website Date Issued Date Due
Five Multiple Choice Questions on Plate Tectonics
11/11 11/12
Project – Decade Volcanoes
11/15 11/19
Project – Killer Earthquakes
11/17 12/1
Project – Greatest Mountains
11/19 12/3
Project – Fossils 12/2 12/9
Lab: Properties of Minerals
12/13 12/14
Video Quiz – Rocks & Minerals
12/15 12/15
Project – Types of Rocks
12/15 1/5
The Non-Silicate MineralsThe oxides are a
family of minerals having structures
consisting of close-packed oxygen atoms with metal or
metalloid atoms occupying the
spaces in between.
Examples of oxides include:
hematite sapphire
ruby magnetite
The Non-Silicate MineralsThe sulfides are
minerals in which sulfur is
combined with one or more
metals.
Examples of sulfides include:
galena cinnabar
pyrite sphalerite
The Non-Silicate MineralsThe sulfates
minerals have a crystal structure in
which a sulfur atom is in the center of a
tetrahedral arrangement with four oxygen atoms
at the corners.
Examples of sulfates include:
gypsum baryte
glauberite anglesite
The Non-Silicate MineralsThe carbonate
minerals contain the carbonate group,
CO3, which is a carbon atom located with an equilateral triangle of oxygen
atoms.
Examples of carbonates
include:
calcite dolomite
malachite azurite
The Non-Silicate MineralsThe native elements
are minerals formed of a single chemical
element.
Examples of native elements
include:
gold copper
sulfurdiamond (carbon)
Table 2.1
Table 2.A
Australian sapphires depicting variations in cuts and colors.
Birthstones
Mineral ResourcesMineral resources are Earth’s storehouse of useful minerals that can be recovered for use. Mineral reserves are already-
identified deposits of minerals that can be extracted.
Ores are useful metallic minerals that can be mined at
a profit. Economic factors may change
and influence a resource.
An underground halite (salt) mine
Figure 2.22
Hematite, an ore of iron
Gold, silver, copper, mercury, and lead are examples of metallic mineral resources.
Concentrations of these desirable materials are
produced by both igneous and
metamorphic processes.
Metallic Mineral Resources