Introduction To Earth Science: Fourth Edition
Introduction To Earth Science: Fourth Edition
Chapter 7
Rocks and
Minerals
© McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No
reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
Contents
1. Earth Scientists: Nature Detectives
2. Elements and Atoms: Basic Building Blocks
3. Minerals
4. Igneous Rocks
5. Sedimentary Rocks
6. Metamorphic Rocks
7. The Rock Cycle and Mineral Resources
NASA
© McGraw-Hill Education. 7-3
Earth Scientists: Nature Detectives
(2 of 14)
Understanding rocks enables scientists to
• Locate mineral resources (e.g., copper,
gypsum)
• Find fossil fuels (e.g., oil, gas, coal)
• Assess the risk from natural hazards such as
volcanic eruptions and tsunami
• Learn about Earth processes such as plate
tectonics
• Discover the history and origins of other
planets
a: © David McConnell
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Earth Scientists: Nature Detectives
(6 of 14)
Variations in the composition of raw materials
produces different brick colors. Red bricks contain
more iron.
b: © David McConnell
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Earth Scientists: Nature Detectives
(7 of 14)
Where do bricks come from?
Raw materials smashed into smaller pieces in
crusher.
Crushed materials ground to smaller size by
grinding wheel.
Resulting particles passed through a series of
screens to sort materials by size.
Sugar- and flour-sized particles mixed with water
and other ingredients.
Small particles mixed with water and other
ingredients.
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Earth Scientists: Nature Detectives
(8 of 14)
Wet mixture forced through brick-shaped form.
Wet “bar” cut into smaller brick-sized pieces.
Excess water removed by passing wet bricks
slowly through long dryers (200oC).
Final stage is “firing” of bricks in kiln at high
temperatures (1,100oC).
© PhotoLink/Getty Images
(a-b): Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced
with permission of McGraw-Hill Education
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Elements and Atoms: Basic Building
Blocks (7 of 24)
Atomic number – the number of protons in the
nucleus
Each element has a different number of protons
in the atomic nucleus
Example: Neon has 10 protons, Helium has 2
protons
a. Sodium (Na+)
a: Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced with
permission of McGraw-Hill Education
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Elements and Atoms: Basic Building
Blocks (13 of 24)
b. Chlorine (Cl-)
b: Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced with
permission of McGraw-Hill Education
c. Adapted from Francis Carey, Organic Chemistry 5e © 2003, reproduced with permission of
McGraw-Hill Education
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Elements and Atoms: Basic Building
Blocks (15 of 24)
Covalent bonds – sharing of electrons between
elements
Adapted from Francis Carey, Organic Chemistry 5e © 2003, reproduced with permission of
McGraw-Hill Education
Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced with
permission of McGraw-Hill Education
A. FeS2
B. KAlSi3O8
C. Fe2O3
D. CaSO4 2H2O
a: © David Steer
b: © David Steer
a: © medaacek/iStock/Getty Images
b: © RF Company/Alamy
Mineral Characteristics
Hardness – minerals ranked by their relative
hardness using Mohs Hardness Scale
• Harder minerals can scratch softer minerals
• Softer minerals more likely to break down at
Earth’s surface
• More resistant minerals more likely to be
preserved (e.g., quartz sand on beaches)
a: © David Steer
b: © David Steer
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Types of cleavage (1 of 2)
Cleavage – minerals break along planes of
weakness defined by atomic structure
a. One direction
b. two directions that intersect at 90° angles
c. two directions that do not intersect at 90°
angles
d. three directions, intersecting at 90° angles
e. three directions, not intersecting at 90° angles
f. four directions (for example, diamond)
g. six directions. Some minerals have no
cleavage planes (for example, quartz), while
others may have several.
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Types of cleavage (2 of 2)
(a-g): Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced
with permission of McGraw-Hill Education
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Atoms to rocks: How they fit together
© David McConnell
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Igneous Rocks (2 of 8)
Two types of igneous rocks are classified based
on texture and composition
The same magma can form both rock types
1. Volcanic rocks – form when magma rises to
Earth's surface
• Produces volcanoes, lava flows, tephra
• Molten rock cools rapidly
Adapted from James Zumberge, Laboratory Manual for Physical Geology 12e © 2005,
reproduced with permission of McGraw-Hill Education
Examples of Plutons
Batholith, stock, sill, dike, laccolith
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Igneous Rocks (4 of 8)
Adapted from James Zumberge, Laboratory Manual for Physical Geology 12e © 2005,
reproduced with permission of McGraw-Hill Education
D. A. Swanson/USGS
Adapted from Charles (Carlos) Plummer, Physical Geology 11e © 2007, reproduced with
permission of McGraw-Hill Education
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Sedimentary Rocks (1 of 13)
Sedimentary rocks form as horizontal layers
(beds)
• identified based on composition, thickness
• oldest beds at bottom, youngest at top
Three types of sedimentary rocks
Clastic, Chemical, Biochemical
• Identified by materials that make up the rock
and/or the process by which they formed
USGS
USGS
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Sedimentary Rocks (3 of 13)
USGS
USGS
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Sedimentary Rocks (4 of 13)
Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
1. Generation
• Physical and chemical breakdown of any rock
at Earth’s surface (weathering) to form
sediment
2. Transportation
• Erosion Sediment moved from place of
origin by streams, wind, glaciers
a: NASA
b: NASA
0.0039 to 0.0625 mm
Silt Siltstone Smaller than granulated sugar
(0.00015 to 0.0025 in)
0.0625 to 2 mm (0.0025 to
Sand Sandstone Ranges from sugar to coarse salt
0.079 in)
USGS
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Sedimentary Rocks (1 of 10)
Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
Form when minerals precipitate (crystallize) from
a solution as a result of changing physical
conditions
• Solutions = fresh water in lakes, groundwater
or seawater
• Changing conditions commonly = increased
temperatures (evaporation)
© Purestock/SuperStock
a: © David Steer
b: © AdShooter/iStock/Getty Images
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Sedimentary Rocks (8 of 10)
Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks
May form from the remains of dead organisms
• Chalk formed from billions of coccoliths, round
plates of calcite from microscopic (clay-sized)
coccolithophore organisms
• Chalk is a type of limestone
a: NASA
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Sedimentary Rocks (9 of 10)
b: © Bob Krist/Corbis
c: NASA
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Sedimentary Rocks and Fossil Fuels
(1 of 4)
The world is heavily dependent on oil and natural
gas
• Form from buried organic-rich sediments.
• Chemical reactions convert organics with
increased pressures and temperatures of 50-
100 ºC.
• Over time (Myrs), oil and gas can form.
• Oil and gas may be trapped to form
hydrocarbon reservoirs.
b: USGS
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Mineral Resources (3 of 5)
Mineral resources result from specific geologic
processes associated with formation of rocks.
• Can result when minerals crystallize at different
temperatures.
• Can result from concentration of various types of
rocks and minerals during erosion,
transportation and deposition
b: © Stephen Reynolds
© McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Authorized only for instructor use in the classroom. No
reproduction or further distribution permitted without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education. 7-112