Minerals are naturally-occurring inorganic solids with specific chemical composition and ordered arrangements of atoms that form rocks. Minerals also provide materials used in production processes of vehicles, electronics and cosmetics products.
Some minerals display various properties, such as hardness and cleavage. Furthermore, they each possess their own specific gravity which measures density of minerals.
Minerals are made up of chemical elements
Minerals are naturally occurring, inorganic solid substances with defined crystal structures and distinct chemical composition. Some minerals contain individual elements like gold or silver; others may contain multiple elements combined into compounds. A mineral’s chemical composition determines its gross properties – its chemical makeup determines atomic arrangement that gives rise to gross properties such as density or hardness. According to the International Mineralogical Association (IMA), minerals are defined as substances which remain solid at room temperature with clearly-defined crystal structures, specific chemical composition and nonmetallic specific gravity properties.
All minerals are crystals, and their distinct features include their crystalline structure and ease of breaking apart. These properties help mineralogists classify minerals according to physical characteristics such as cleavage, luster and hardness. Other characteristics, like specific gravity and color are less significant but still useful when trying to identify certain types of minerals; galena (lead sulfide) has a higher specific gravity than bauxite (aluminum hydroxide), likely due to differences between their elemental makeups.
They have a crystalline structure
Minerals possess crystalline structures, which is defined as three-dimensional arrangements of chemical units such as atoms or ions in inorganic substances and molecules in organic ones). Their crystal structures can often be recognized by their external morphology; this reflects both their internal chemical composition as well as environmental conditions like temperature and pressure changes that alter atom distances; for instance, higher temperatures can alter crystal structures while increased pressure causes changes by pushing closer together atoms in an orderly fashion – changes known as polymorphisms.
Minerals are naturally occurring substances with specific chemical composition and characteristic crystalline structure, formed through inorganic processes. A mineral’s physical characteristics – color, luster and cleavage – help identify it. They differ from mineraloids which are inorganic compounds with crystal structures but no identifiable chemical makeup.
They have a specific gravity
Specific gravity (SG) measures how heavy a mineral is relative to water. This unitless property can help compare minerals of similar weight. Lighter minerals have low specific gravity levels while heavier ones typically possess higher values – rock-forming silicates and carbonates usually possess values between 2.5 to 2.7 for their specific gravity value; ore deposits often display greater values.
Gold has an extremely high specific gravity, making it easier to isolate from other materials and identify. Pyrite has a lower specific gravity but still denser than many minerals, making it easy to spot.
To quickly and simply determine specific gravity, compare samples that are of equal size and shape to one another. This process doesn’t require equipment; simply hold one mineral (either unknown or known) in one hand while lifting up another of similar size; whichever feels heavier is likely the one with higher specific gravity.
They have a specific name
Minerals are named for various reasons, including their chemical makeup, where they were discovered, or any resemblance they have with common objects. Trade names often focus on colour or pattern to help differentiate high-grade varieties from lower grades; Labradorite was given its name based on where it was initially discovered while other minerals have their names given according to specific hue or the person who discovered them.
Geologists define minerals as naturally-occurring inorganic solids with an ordered chemical composition and atomic arrangement. However, the International Mineralogical Association (IMA) allows non-natural minerals like halite to count as minerals despite not occurring naturally – its composition involving sodium and chlorine atoms being organized within its atomic structure. Furthermore, its definition has changed through history but still maintains an organized meaning today.