Minerals and Its Properties-1
Minerals and Its Properties-1
Flourite
Lustre
Hardness
From left to right: Row 1 --- Talc, Gypsum, Calcite, Flourite, Row 2 --- Apatite, Orthoclase,
Quartz, Topaz, Row 3 --- Corundum, Diamond
Cleavages
The tendency of a mineral to break along a plane of weakness in the crystal lattice.
The way in which a mineral breaks is determined by the arrangement of its atoms and the
strength of the chemical bonds holding them together.
A mineral that exhibits cleavage consistently breaks, or cleaves, along parallel flat surfaces
called cleavage planes.
Minerals can have 1, 2, 3, 4 or 6 planes of cleavage
Cleavage quality is described as perfect, good, and poor.
Minerals with a perfect or excellent cleavage break easily along flat surfaces and are easy to spot.
Minerals with good cleavages do not have such well-defined cleavage planes and reflect less light.
Poor- cleavages are the toughest to recognize, but can be spotted by small flashes of light in certain
positions
Minerals with one cleavage are often said to have a basal cleavage.
Two cleavage directions are present when planes of breakage occur along two non-parallel planes.
These two planes can be perpendicular (at 90°) to one another, in which case the mineral is said to
have prismatic cleavage. In some minerals the two planes of cleavage may not be perpendicular –
this is known as non-prismatic cleavage.
Some minerals have three planes of cleavage: If the three cleavages intersect at 90° the mineral
is said to have cubic cleavage. If none of the cleavage planes intersect at right angles the shape is
a squashed cube known as a rhombohedron (called rhombohedral cleavage). A third variant
occurs when a mineral has two cleavage planes that are perpendicular, and a third that is not
perpendicular to the other two.
Minerals with four or six cleavage directions are not common. Four cleavage planes can intersect
to form an eight sided figure known as an octahedron. Fluorite is the most common mineral with
an octahedral cleavage. Six cleavage directions intersect to form a dodecahedron, a twelve-sided
form with diamond-shaped faces. A common mineral with dodecahedal cleavage is sphalerite.
Fracture
Fracture is the characteristic mark left when a mineral chips or breaks. Cleavage and fracture differ
in that cleavage is the break of a crystal face where a new face (resulting in a smooth plane) is
formed, whereas fracture is the "chipping" shape of a mineral. All minerals exhibit a fracture, even
those that exhibit cleavage. If a mineral with cleavage is chipped a certain way, it will fracture
rather than cleave.
There are several terms to describe the various mineral fractures:
Conchoidal - Fracture resembling a semi-circular shell, with a smooth, curved surface. An
example of conchoidal fracture can be seen in broken glass. (This fracture is also known as "shelly"
in some reference guides.)
Uneven - Fracture that leaves a rough or irregular surface.
Hackly - Fracture that resembles broken metal, with rough, jagged, points. True metals exhibit
this fracture. (This fracture is also known as "jagged".)
Splintery - Fracture that forms elongated splinters. All fibrous minerals fall into this category.
Earthy or crumbly - Fracture of minerals that crumble when broken.
Even or smooth - Fracture that forms a smooth surface.
Subconchoidal - Fracture that falls somewhere between conchoidal and even; smooth with
irregular rounded corners.
Tenacity
Tenacity describes the reaction of a mineral to stress such as crushing, bending, breaking, or
tearing. Certain minerals react differently to each type of stress. Since tenacity is composed of
several reactions to various stresses, it is possible for a mineral to have more than one type of
tenacity. The different forms of tenacity are:
Brittle - If a mineral is hammered and the result is a powder or small crumbs, it is considered
brittle. Brittle minerals leave a fine powder if scratched, which is the way to test a mineral to see
if it is brittle. The majority of all minerals are brittle. An example is Quartz. (Minerals that are not
brittle may be referred to as Non-brittle minerals.)
Sectile - Sectile minerals can be separated with a knife, much like wax but usually not as soft. An
example is Gypsum.
Malleable - If a mineral can be flattened by pounding with a hammer, it is malleable. All
true metals are malleable. An example is Silver.
Ductile - A mineral that can be stretched into a wire is ductile. All true metals are ductile. An
example is Gold.
Flexible but inelastic - Any mineral that can be bent, but remains in the new position after it is
bent is flexible but inelastic. If the term flexible is singularly used, it implies flexible but inelastic.
An example is Copper.
Flexible and elastic - When flexible and elastic minerals are bent, they spring back to their original
position. All fibrous minerals, and some acicular minerals belong in this category. An example
is Chrysotile Serpentine.
Specific Gravity
The specific gravity of a mineral is the weight of that mineral divided by the weight of an equal
volume of water.
The specific gravity of water equals 1.0.
Most silicate, or rock-forming, minerals have specific gravities of 2.6 to 3.4; the ore minerals are
usually heavier, with specific gravities of 5 to 8.
Quartz (SiO2) has a S.G. of 2.65, while galena (PbS) has a S.G. of 7.5, and gold (Au) has a S.G.
of 19.3.
Minerals with a specific gravity under 2 are considered light, between 2 and 4.5 average, and
greater than 4.5 heavy.
Habit / Form
Habit is the general appearance a mineral tends to have – whether it is found as blocky crystals,
long slender ones, or aggregates of some type, etc. If the crystals are glassy but cubic in shape
you know they aren’t quartz. If they are rounded like a soccer ball you know they aren’t
tourmaline. And so on…
Natrolite, 10 cm tall,
Tasmania, Australia
Molybdenite &
ferrimolybdenite (yellow),
Canada 3cm across.
Additional Properties
Special properties help identify some minerals. These properties may not be distinctive enough in
most minerals to help with their identification or they may be present only in certain minerals.
Feel
The "feel" of a mineral can sometimes help identify it. Some minerals are greasy to the touch,
others are smooth, and others have a rough feel.
Diamond, which absorbs heat better than any substance, has a unique, cold feel at room
temperature.
Talc gives a slippery feel.
Taste
Some minerals have a distinctive taste.
Acid or sour: sulfuric acid, indicates the presence of sulfur
Alkaline: potash
Astringent: (puckering) alum
Bitter: Epsom or bitter salts
Cooling: saltpeter (NaNO3)
Metallic: decomposed FeS2, brassy taste
Saline: salty, NaCl, etc.
Odor
Several minerals give off a distinctive odor in certain conditions. Sulfur specimens, in normal
room conditions, give off a mild odor resembling the smell of a lighting match. However if heated
or struck, they will give off a powerful odor like rotten eggs. Many sulfides, such as Pyrite, also
give off a rotten-egg odor if heated or struck.
Native Arsenic specimens give off a very mild garlic smell in normal room conditions. However,
if heated or struck, they give off a powerful garlic odor. Some minerals containing arsenic in
their chemical formula, such as Arsenopyrite, also give off a garlic odor if struck or heated. (One
should never heat a mineral that possibly contains arsenic since its fumes are toxic.)
If wet or in moist conditions, minerals of the clay group, such as Kaolinite, give off an odor
resembling fresh clay.
Magnetism
Some minerals are attracted to a hand magnet. Some minerals are strongly attracted to the magnet,
others are weakly attracted, and one mineral is actually repelled. There are also several minerals
that are attracted to magnetic fields only when heated.
In virtually all cases, the presence of the element iron as a component of the mineral's chemical
structure is responsible its magnetic properties.
Magnetic properties of minerals are defined as follows:
Ferromagnetism describes strong attraction to magnetic fields. This property is exhibited in few
minerals, notably Magnetite and Pyrrhotite.
Paramagnetism is weak attraction to magnetic fields. The attraction is usually discernible, but it
may be so weak that it is undetectable. Most paramagnetic minerals become strongly magnetic
when heated. A small number of paramagnetic minerals, such as Platinum, are not essentially
paramagnetic, but contain iron impurities which are responsible for the paramagnetism. However,
some specimens lacking iron also exist, and these are not paramagnetic. Some examples of
paramagnetic minerals are Hematite and Franklinite.
Diamagnetism. Only one mineral, Bismuth, is diamagnetic, meaning it is repelled from magnetic
fields.
Another property, which is unnamed, is attraction to magnetic fields when heated. Some
iron sulfides and oxides become ferromagnetic after heating, as a result of combined sulfur or
oxygen ions freeing themselves from the iron. Some minerals may even act as magnets when
heated.
Only a variety of one mineral acts as a magnet, generating magnetic fields on its own. This mineral
is Lodestone, the magnetic variety of Magnetite, which found in only a few deposits throughout
the world. Although it is only weakly magnetic, its magnetism is definitely discernible.
Reaction with Acids
Some minerals, especially carbonate minerals, react visibly with acid.
When a drop of dilute hydrochloric acid is placed on calcite (CaCO3), it readily bubbles or
effervesces, releasing carbon dioxide.