πŸ’Ž Geology · Minerals

Geology tricks that make minerals memorable

Mohs hardness, silicates, cleavage, and mineral identification β€” mastered.

πŸ’Ž Minerals

Memory tricks

Proven mnemonics — fast to learn, hard to forget.

Mineral Identification
CLHSC: Color, Luster, Hardness, Streak, Cleavage. Plus: specific gravity, crystal form, magnetism, taste (halite).
Mineral Identification Properties
The systematic properties used to identify any mineral β€” without a chemistry lab
Color: unreliable alone (quartz can be clear, purple, pink, white). Streak: color of powder on unglazed porcelain β€” diagnostic (hematite: red-brown streak regardless of surface color). Luster: metallic vs non-metallic (vitreous/glassy, resinous, pearly, silky, adamantine/diamond). Hardness: Mohs test. Cleavage: flat breaks along atomic planes β€” number of directions and angles (mica: 1 direction perfect; halite: 3 at 90Β°). Fracture: conchoidal (quartz), hackly. Specific gravity: density relative to water. Special properties: magnetism (magnetite), effervescence with HCl (calcite), fluorescence (fluorite), taste (halite).
Color
Unreliable alone
Luster
Metallic vs non-metallic
Hardness
Mohs scratch test
Streak
Powder color β€” more reliable
Cleavage
Flat breaks along planes
Specific gravity
Density vs water
Silicates
Silicates: SiOβ‚„ tetrahedra β€” isolated, chains, sheets, frameworks. 90% of Earth's crust. Quartz = 3D framework.
Silicate Minerals
The dominant mineral group in Earth's crust β€” built from the silicon-oxygen tetrahedron
SiOβ‚„ tetrahedron: 4 oxygen around 1 silicon β€” fundamental building block. Structures: isolated (olivine, garnets β€” nesosilicates), single chain (pyroxenes), double chain (amphiboles), sheet (micas, clay minerals), framework (quartz, feldspars β€” every Si-O shared). Framework silicates are most stable/common. Feldspars: most abundant mineral group in crust β€” plagioclase (Na-Ca) and K-feldspar. Quartz: pure SiOβ‚‚, very common, resistant to weathering. Micas: perfect basal cleavage (sheet structure). Olivine: mantle mineral, least stable, weathers first (Bowen's Series).
Cleavage vs Fracture
Cleavage: flat break along atomic planes (1–4 directions). Fracture: irregular break. Mica = perfect 1-dir cleavage.
Cleavage and Fracture
The most diagnostic physical property of many minerals β€” how they break
Cleavage: preferential breakage along planes of weak atomic bonding. Number of directions: mica (1), feldspar and calcite (2–3), halite (3 at 90Β°). Angles between cleavage planes: diagnostic. Calcite: 3 cleavage at 75Β° β†’ rhombohedra. Halite: 3 at 90Β° β†’ cubes. Amphibole vs pyroxene: both have 2 cleavages, but angle differs (amphibole ~60/120Β°, pyroxene ~90Β°) β€” diagnostic for thin section. Fracture types: conchoidal (quartz, obsidian β€” curved shell-like), hackly (native metals), uneven/irregular. Obsidian cleavage: none (fractures conchoidally β€” sharp edges, used as cutting tools).
Bowen's Reaction Series
Bowen's Series: olivine β†’ pyroxene β†’ amphibole β†’ biotite β†’ K-feldspar β†’ muscovite β†’ quartz. First in, first to weather.
Bowen's Reaction Series
The order in which minerals crystallize from cooling magma β€” and why it also predicts weathering sequence
N.L. Bowen (1922): two branches crystallizing from basaltic magma. Discontinuous branch (iron/magnesium): olivine β†’ pyroxene β†’ amphibole β†’ biotite (each replaces previous as temp drops). Continuous branch: Ca-plagioclase β†’ Na-plagioclase (composition shifts as temp drops). Both converge at K-feldspar β†’ muscovite β†’ quartz (last to crystallize, most stable at surface). Goldich Dissolution Series: minerals crystallizing FIRST (high temp, deep) are LEAST stable at surface β†’ weather first. Quartz: crystallizes last, most stable β€” forms beach sand. Olivine: weathers fastest.
Olivine
First to crystallize, first to weather
Pyroxene β†’ Amphibole
Intermediate stability
Biotite β†’ Muscovite
Micas β€” intermediate
K-feldspar
Late, fairly stable
Quartz
Last to crystallize, most stable
Non-Silicate Minerals
Non-silicates: carbonates (calcite, dolomite), oxides (hematite, magnetite), sulfides (pyrite, galena), native elements (gold).
Non-Silicate Minerals
The economically important non-silicate minerals β€” ore minerals and rock-formers
Carbonates: calcite (CaCO₃, reacts with HCl β†’ COβ‚‚), dolomite (CaMg(CO₃)β‚‚), aragonite. Form limestone and marble. Sulfides: pyrite (FeSβ‚‚, 'fool's gold' β€” metallic luster, cubic crystals), galena (PbS, lead ore), chalcopyrite (CuFeSβ‚‚, copper ore), sphalerite (ZnS). Oxides: hematite (Feβ‚‚O₃, red streak, iron ore), magnetite (Fe₃Oβ‚„, magnetic, iron ore), corundum (Alβ‚‚O₃, rubies/sapphires). Sulfates: gypsum (CaSOβ‚„Β·2Hβ‚‚O, wallboard), anhydrite, barite. Halides: halite (NaCl, table salt), fluorite (CaFβ‚‚, fluorescence). Native elements: gold, silver, copper, sulfur, graphite, diamond.
Crystal Systems
Crystal systems: Cubic (halite, garnet, diamond), Hexagonal (quartz, calcite), Orthorhombic, Monoclinic, Triclinic, Tetragonal.
Crystal Systems
The seven crystal systems β€” how atomic arrangement creates external crystal form
Seven systems based on symmetry of unit cell: Cubic (isometric): 3 equal axes at 90Β° β€” garnet, halite, pyrite, diamond, magnetite. Hexagonal: 4 axes, 3 equal at 60Β° + vertical β€” quartz, calcite, graphite, ice. Tetragonal: 3 axes at 90Β°, 2 equal β€” zircon, rutile. Orthorhombic: 3 unequal axes at 90Β° β€” olivine, aragonite, topaz. Monoclinic: 3 unequal axes, one not at 90Β° β€” gypsum, augite, hornblende. Triclinic: all unequal, none at 90Β° β€” plagioclase, kyanite. Crystal habit: shape of crystal (prismatic, tabular, acicular, bladed). Crystal system informs cleavage angles.
Gemstones
Gemstones: hardness + rarity + beauty. Diamond = carbon. Ruby/Sapphire = corundum. Emerald = beryl. Quartz family includes amethyst.
Gemstones
The mineralogy behind precious and semi-precious stones β€” and what makes them valuable
Diamond: pure carbon, cubic, hardest mineral (10 Mohs). Formed at >150 km depth, brought up in kimberlite pipes. 4Cs: cut, clarity, color, carat. Ruby: corundum (Alβ‚‚O₃) + Cr³⁺ impurity β†’ red. Sapphire: corundum + Fe/Ti β†’ blue (also yellow, pink, orange). Myanmar (Burma) best rubies, Kashmir best sapphires. Emerald: beryl (Be₃Alβ‚‚Si₆Oβ‚β‚ˆ) + Cr β†’ green. Colombia best. Aquamarine: beryl + Fe β†’ blue. Amethyst: quartz + Fe + irradiation β†’ purple. Opal: hydrated amorphous silica (not crystalline). Pearl: calcium carbonate from molluscs. Value = rarity + hardness + optical properties.
Mineral Resources
Ore minerals: concentrated enough to mine economically. Banded Iron Formations (BIF) = iron ore. Porphyry copper deposits.
Mineral Resources
How economically important minerals concentrate β€” the geology behind mining
Ore deposit: mineral concentration economically viable to extract. BIFs (Banded Iron Formations): 3.8–1.8 Ga, Precambrian, source of most iron ore (Pilbara, Labrador). Porphyry copper: large-volume, low-grade Cu deposits associated with intrusive magmatism (Chile β€” Escondida, Chuquicamata). Hydrothermal veins: hot water deposits minerals in fractures (gold, silver, quartz). Evaporites: evaporation deposits halite, gypsum, potash (fertilizer). Placers: heavy minerals concentrate in streams (gold, tin, diamonds). Critical minerals: lithium (pegmatites, brines β€” EV batteries), cobalt, rare earth elements (REE β€” wind turbines, electronics). Mining impacts: tailings, acid mine drainage.
Rock-Forming Minerals
Main rock-forming minerals: quartz, feldspars (K-spar + plagioclase), micas (muscovite + biotite), pyroxenes, amphiboles, olivine.
Rock-Forming Minerals
The handful of minerals that make up 99% of all rocks in Earth's crust
Feldspars: most abundant group — K-feldspar (orthoclase, sanidine, microcline) in granite; plagioclase (albite→anorthite solid solution) in most igneous rocks. Distinguish: K-feldspar has pink tint, Carlsbad twinning; plagioclase has striations (albite twinning). Quartz: SiO₂, clear/white/gray, conchoidal fracture, no cleavage, hardness 7. Micas: perfect basal cleavage, flexible sheets — muscovite (light, felsic rocks) and biotite (dark, mafic). Pyroxenes: dark, 2 cleavages at ~90°, in gabbro and basalt. Amphiboles: dark, 2 cleavages at ~60/120°, hornblende in andesite/diorite. Olivine: green, granular, in basalt and mantle.
Mineral Formation Environments
Minerals form by: magmatic crystallization, hydrothermal precipitation, sedimentary (evaporation, biochemical), metamorphic recrystallization.
Mineral Formation
How minerals form β€” four processes that create all natural inorganic compounds
Magmatic: crystallize from cooling melt β€” silicates (Bowen's Series). Temperature determines which minerals form. Hydrothermal: hot water (100–500Β°C) carries dissolved minerals β†’ precipitate in fractures as water cools. Many ore deposits (gold, copper, silver veins). Sedimentary: evaporation (halite, gypsum), biochemical precipitation (calcite in shells β†’ limestone), chemical (chert, BIF). Weathering: decomposition of existing minerals β†’ clay minerals. Metamorphic: existing minerals recrystallize under heat + pressure without melting β†’ new minerals (garnet, staurolite, kyanite, sillimanite index minerals of metamorphic grade).
Native Elements
Native elements: pure single-element minerals. Gold, silver, copper, sulfur, graphite, and diamond are all native elements.
Native Elements
Minerals made of just one element β€” from precious metals to graphite and diamond
Native metals: gold (Au, inert β€” never tarnishes, found in streams and veins), silver (Ag, tarnishes), copper (Cu, oldest metal smelted ~7000 BCE), platinum (rare, high melting point). Native nonmetals: sulfur (yellow, around volcanic vents), diamond (C, cubic, hardest), graphite (C, hexagonal, softest conductor β€” same element as diamond, different crystal structure). Carbon allotropes: diamond (spΒ³ bonds, 3D framework β†’ hardest) vs graphite (spΒ² bonds, flat sheets β†’ soft, conducts electricity). Bismuth, arsenic, antimony also occur as native elements. Native elements β‰ˆ 20 minerals β€” small group but highly valuable.