Definition of Mineral
Mineral Properties
Applied Properties
Mineral Formation
Trivia
100

Minerals must be in this common phase state.

Solid

100

This is typically the most obvious property of minerals but tends to be the least useful when attempting to identify unknown minerals

Color

100

The atoms in a particular sample are arranged in repeating cubes, giving a cubic shape to the crystals as well. What property is described here?

Crystal shape

100

The two types of liquid from which solid minerals may form

Magma and water with things dissolved in it

100

Commonly believed to be the hardest mineral, a 10 on the Mohs scale

Diamond

200

This part of the mineral definition means that it was never living or made by something living

"Inorganic"

200

This property deals with a minerals resistance to being scratched.

Hardness

200

Quartz, which is typically white or translucent, may also be found in purple, pink, gray, or many other colored varieties. What most likely causes this variation in colors?

Trace elements/impurities in the crystal

200

Any mineral formed from the evaporation of water out of a solution

Evaporite

200

This category of mineral is by far most abundant in Earth's crust

Silicates

300

Describe what it means for a solid to be crystalline

The atoms in the solid must be arranged in a regular pattern

300

This test refers to the colored powder left behind after a mineral is scratched on an unglazed porcelein tile

Streak

300

Sapphire has a hardness of 9 on the Moh's hardness scale while opal has a hardness of 5. Can opal scratch sapphire?

No (but sapphire can scratch opal)

300

The substance which is dissolved in a solvent to make a solution

Solute

300

This category of mineral often bubble when acid is dropped on them

Carbonates

400

Minerals have this, meaning that a sample of halite found in Brazil would be chemically the same as a halite sample from China.

A specific chemical composition

400

This refers to the way a mineral reflects light.

Luster

400

When a particular mineral is struck, it always fractures cleanly along the vertical axis. What can you say about the atomic bonds in this crystal?

The bonds along the vertical axis are weaker than the other bonds.

400

Describe the relationship between the composition of magma and the minerals that can form from it

The minerals that can form from a given sample of magma are those which use the same atoms the magma already contains

400

This mineral is also known as "fool's gold"

Pyrite

500

State the complete definition of a mineral

A mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid, with a specific chemical composition and a definite crystalline structure

500

A mineral that breaks in a certain way may show one of these two properties

Cleavage and fracture

500

Mineral A can scratch mineral B and mineral C.

Mineral B cannot scratch mineral A or C.

Mineral C can scratch mineral B, but not mineral A.

Rank the minerals from hardest to softest.

Mineral A is hardest.

Mineral C is next hardest

Mineral B is softest

500

Describe how a crystal formed at Earth's surface is likely to be different from a crystal formed from the same substances deep beneath Earth's crust

The crystal formed at Earth's surface will likely be much smaller because of the lower temperature and faster cooling

500

Rubies and sapphires are both varieties of this mineral

Corundum