Minerals
Igneous Rocks
Sedimentary Rocks
Metamorphic Rocks
The Rock Cycle
100

This term is used to describe items that come from living things.

Organic

100

This word "igneous" comes from the Latin "ignis" which mean this.

Fire

100

Small particles of rock, sand, pebbles, leaves and shells are known by this name.

Sediment

100

Any type of rock can be morphed into metamorphic rock as long as it's given enough of this.

Heat and Pressure

100

This process allows solid rock to become liquid once again.

Melting

200

This type of test, usually done on a ceramic plate, involves finding the color of a mineral's powder.

Streak test

200

Rocks that cool within Earth's crust are referred to by this category.

Intrusive

200

This term is used to describe the squeezing of particle layers together from the weight of the ground above them.

Compaction

200

Metamorphic rocks that have no sort of grain arrangement are referred to by this term.

Nonfoliated

200

Extrusive Rocks come from the cooling of this liquid rock.

Lava

300

The scratch test can allow geologists to determine the hardness of a mineral or where it falls on this scale.

Mohs Hardness Scale

300

Rocks that cool quickly typically have this type of grain.

Fine grains

300

This type of organic sedimentary rock is burned as fuel...causing much pollution in the process.

Coal

300

The sedimentary rock shale can be exposed to heat and pressure, which can morph it into this type of rock.

Slate

300

This process causes some sedimentary rocks to have visible layers.

Deposition

400

Minerals that break apart unevenly are said to have a fracture. Minerals that break apart cleanly along a flat plane are said to have this property.

Cleavage

400

Rocks like granite have their colors determined by these.

Minerals

400

Rocks formed from the crystallization of minerals dissolved in water are known by this name.

Chemical rocks

400

The leaning Tower of Pisa was made from this type of even-grained metamorphic rock.

Marble

400

Weathering and Erosion are driven by these two root factors

Gravity and the Sun

500

One of the most common types of crystal structures, this six sided pattern is exhibited by quartz.

Hexagonal

500

This type of glassy igneous rock has been used for centuries for daggers and blades because of its tendency to chip off sharp edges.

Obsidian

500

Because of the calcite in this type of rock, statues made of this are very vulnerable to acid rain.

Limestone

500

This is the term given to the parent rock that will become metamorphic.

Protolith

500

Around this many rock-forming minerals make up most of the rocks in Earth's crust.

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