Rocks and Crystals
Minerals are fun
Minerals are solid!
Minerals are the natural choice!
Minerals are ORDERLY
100

These are the two main families of rock-forming minerals.

silicates and nonsilicates

100

This is the softest mineral.

talc

100

Of these, this is the gemstone; explain why the others aren't: coral, gypsum, quartz, ruby

ruby.  Coral is organic.  Gypsum is common and not hard enough, quartz is too common

100

These two physical properties result from the way light interacts with a mineral.

Color and luster

100

A penny has a hardness of 3, glass has a hardness of 5.5; which can scratch the other?

Glass will scratch a penny

200

Carbonates, native elements, and oxides are part of this rock family.

nonsilicate

200

This has a hardness of 10.

Diamond

200

These are valuable mineral deposits that can be mined for a profit

Ores

200

Minerals cannot be this.

Organic.

200

This is a common use of copper

plumbing

300

An igneous rock with large crystals most likely underwent this type of cooling.

Slow

300

Glass has this hardness.

5.5

300

Look for this feature to see if a mineral exhibits cleavage

smooth, flat surfaces

300
This property causes halite to break into cubes.

Cleavage

300

Identify a crystal that is not a mineral

sugar

400

This produces tiny, hard to see crystals.

Lava 

400

This process forms ALL of Earth's minerals.

Crystalization

400

Look for this feature to see if a mineral exhibits fracture.

breaking into uneven surfaces
400
A gold vein forms in this crystallization environment.

hot solution

400

This is how to calculate the density of a mineral and this is the standard unit used

divide its mass by its volume

500

This crystalizes slowly because it cools underground.

Magma

500

This is where calcite falls on the Mohs scale.

3

500

This tool is used to determine a mineral's streak.

An unglazed porcelain tile

500

This mineral reacts with hydrochloric acid

Calcite

500

Minerals that break along planes of weakness exhibit this.

Cleavage