College Level Geology

Page 100

Mohs scale is much more convenient and inexpensive compared to the Vickers test but they both can be used by mineralogists. Remember too that hardness depends on the direction of the mineral you are pressing or scratching on. If you test the hardness parallel to the long axis of a crystal, you might get a 5 but if you test it parallel to the short axis, you'd get a 7. This is because of the different ways a compound will bond with another neighboring compound. This is how gemologists base the cutting of gems like diamonds for the best shine and polish.

MORE ON SILICATE MINERALS Silicates are so common that you'll find them in every part of the world and in most grains of sand. When we think of the term "crystal", we are usually talking about quartz crystal. Quartz and other silicates have some combination of oxygen and silicon in varying forms – usually with one or more elements mixed into a larger molecule. Quartz is SiO2 chemically, while Olivine is SiO4 plus magnesium or iron. While seemingly so similar, they have widely differing properties. Silicates are ionic salts based on a tetrahedral shape. The silicon atom is in the middle with four oxygen atoms sticking out. This is a very stable tetrahedral molecule, often found in groupings. The bond between silicon and oxygen is extremely strong. There are about 25 common types of silicate molecules in nature. This is because the base silicate molecule can easily polymerize to make others. You can get chains or sheets of these structures at any given point in time. Olivine is a simple silicate. It has the silicate molecule of SiO4 plus magnesium and iron. The silicate molecule is an ion that is negatively charged. Like any salt, it will form a salt with either magnesium or iron, giving this rock a dark or dense coloration. Olivine does not cleave because there is no polymerization of the tetrahedral shapes. Take these same tetrahedrons and put them in chains to get amphiboles and pyroxenes. The chains bond to any of the major cations like calcium, magnesium, or iron. Bridges form between the chains in some cases. If there are no bridges, you'll get the pyroxenes, which are single-chain polymers of the silicate molecules. These are also dark in color. Pyroxene forms the dark-colored mineral in gabbro. Amphiboles like hornblende is a 85


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Course Questions

28min
pages 259-299

Chapter 15: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 252-254

Summary

6min
pages 255-258

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 251

Glacial Lakes

2min
pages 249-250

Landforms caused by Glaciers

2min
pages 247-248

Chapter 14: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 242-244

Key Points in this Chapter

1min
page 241

Geothermal Features

2min
pages 239-240

Coastlines

5min
pages 236-238

Hydrology-based Earth Features

1min
page 235

Channel Types in Streams

1min
page 232

Surface Water Explained

4min
pages 228-229

Fluvial Processes

1min
page 230

Sediment in Streams

2min
page 231

Water Basins

0
page 227

Chapter 13: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 222-224

Avalanches

3min
pages 219-220

Earth Flows

1min
page 218

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 221

Can Landslides be Predicted?

1min
page 217

Types of Landslides

3min
pages 215-216

Chapter 12: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 210-212

Rock Folding

2min
pages 204-206

Folding and Mountain Building

1min
pages 207-208

Key Points in this Chapter

1min
page 209

Faults and Joints

2min
pages 201-203

Strike and Dip Explained

0
page 200

Ductile versus Fragile Rock

3min
pages 198-199

Chapter 11: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 194-196

Earthquake Predictions

0
page 192

Earthquake Measurements

1min
page 188

Measuring Magnitude of an Earthquake

3min
pages 189-190

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 180

Metamorphic Environments

3min
pages 177-179

Earthquake Features

1min
page 187

Conditions of Metamorphism

1min
page 176

Marble

1min
page 175

Schist

1min
pages 172-173

Gneiss

1min
pages 169-170

Non-clastic Rocks

0
page 158

How Sedimentary Rocks are Structured

1min
page 159

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 162

Detrital Sedimentary Rocks

1min
page 157

Naming Sedimentary Rocks

2min
pages 154-156

Sedimentary Rock Basics

1min
page 153

Chapter 8: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 150-151

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 149

Soil Orders

2min
pages 145-146

Basic Soil Types

1min
page 147

Ore Deposits and Weathering

1min
page 148

Soil Formation and Classification

1min
page 144

Soil

2min
pages 142-143

Wind and Desert Features

1min
page 141

Weathering Rates

1min
page 140

Chapter 7: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 134-135

Types of Chemical Weathering

2min
pages 138-139

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 133

Volcano Seismology

2min
pages 131-132

Lava Flows and Pyroclastic Flows

6min
pages 127-130

Types of Volcanoes

2min
pages 124-125

Volcano Anatomy

2min
pages 122-123

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 118

Diamonds and their Origin

2min
pages 116-117

How to Name Igneous Rocks

1min
pages 113-114

Intrusive Igneous Rock

0
page 115

Igneous Textures

1min
page 112

Silicates in Igneous Rock

0
page 111

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 104

Nonsilicate Minerals

4min
pages 101-103

How Magma turns to Rock

3min
pages 108-110

Classifying Minerals

3min
pages 96-97

More on Silicate Minerals

2min
page 100

How Minerals Form

3min
pages 93-95

Chapter 4: Questions and Answers

1min
pages 86-87

Key Points in this Chapter

1min
page 85

Measuring Plate Motion

1min
pages 83-84

Examples of these Phenomena in Geology

0
page 82

Plate Tectonic Basics

1min
pages 78-79

The Cenozoic Era

1min
page 64

Dating Rocks

8min
pages 65-69

Fossils and Fossil Types

2min
pages 70-72

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 73

The Mesozoic Era

1min
page 63

Proterozoic Era

2min
pages 58-59

The Continents

6min
pages 49-53

The Crust

1min
page 43

The Paleozoic Era

2min
pages 60-62

The Inner Core

0
page 45

The Rock Cycle

0
page 46

Major Features of the Ocean Floor and Continents

2min
pages 47-48

The Internal Earth

2min
pages 41-42

The Oxygen Catastrophe

1min
page 38

The Earth's Spheres

1min
pages 39-40

Key Points in this Chapter

0
page 31

S through Z

3min
pages 25-26

I through M

2min
pages 21-22

E through H

2min
pages 19-20

Rock Types and What they Mean

3min
pages 27-30

N through R

2min
pages 23-24
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