Lecture10RockCycleandMinerals.pdf

    Rock Cycle and Mineral Resources

    Lecture 10

    The Earth Is a Dynamic Planet

    ´ Geology´ Study of dynamic processes taking place on the earth’s surface

    and in its interior

    ´ Three major concentric zones of the earth´ Core (Inner and Outer)

    ´ Mantle, including the asthenosphere

    ´ Crust´ Continental crust

    ´ Oceanic crust: 71% of crust

    What Are Rocks?

    ´ Mineral´ Naturally occurring chemical element or compound that exists

    as a crystalline solid

    ´ Mineral resource´ Concentration that we can extract and process into raw

    materials

    ´ Nonrenewable

    ´ Rock´ Solid combination of one or more minerals

    Igneous Rocks

    ´ Igneous rocks´ Igneous—“fiery inception”

    ´ Magma—molten rock beneath Earth’s surface

    ´ Lava—molten rock when it flows onto Earth’s surface

    Slow Cooling – bigger minerals with distinctcrystal structure

    Fast cooling – very fine grained, not crystalline

    Intrusive vs Extrusive Rocks

    Examples of Intrusive Igneous Rocks

    ´ Diorite is a coarse-grained, intrusive igneous rock.

    Granite is a coarse-grained, light colored, intrusive igneous rock.

    Examples of Extrusive Igneous Rocks

    Basalt is a fine-grained, dark-colored extrusive igneous rock.

    Obsidian is a dark-colored volcanic glass that forms from the very rapid cooling of molten rock material. It cools so rapidly that crystals do not form.

    Pumice is a light-colored vesicular igneous rock. It forms through very rapid solidification of a melt. The vesicular texture is a result of gas trapped in the melt at the time of solidification.

    Oceanic and Continental Crust

    ´ Oceanic Crust made up of Basalt (extrusive igneous rock)

    ´ Continental Crust made up of Granite (intrusive igneous rock)

    ´ Basalt is denser than granite

    Sedimentary Rocks Composed of cemented mineral

    grains/rock fragments

    ´ Created by:´ Weathering: breaking rocks into smaller

    pieces

    ´ Erosion: removing grains from parent rock

    ´ Transportation: dispersed by gravity, wind, water, and ice

    ´ Deposition: settling out of the transporting fluid

    ´ Lithification: transforming into solid rock

    Sedimentary Rocks

     Geologists define four classes of sedimentary rock. ´ Clastic: rock fragments (clasts) cemented together

    ´ Biochemical: cemented shells of organisms

    ´ Organic: carbon-rich remains of plants or other organisms

    ´ Chemical: minerals that crystallize from water

    ChemicalClastic OrganicBiochemical

    Clastic Sedimentary Rocks

     Clast size/grain size Diameter of

    fragments/grains Range from very coarse to

    very fine Boulder, cobble, pebble,

    sand, silt, and clay´ Gravel: coarse-grained sediment

    (cobble, pebble).´ Mud: fine-grained (silt and clay)´ As transport distance increases,

    grain size decreases.

    Examples of Clastic Sedimentary Rocks

    Conglomerate – clasts are gravel sized or larger.

    Sandstone – clasts are sand grain sized.

    Shale-clasts are the size of clay grains.

    Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks

     Biochemical limestone´ Principle compound is CaCO3

    ´ Forms in warm, tropical, shallow, clear, O2-rich, marine water

    ´ Composed of shell debris from diverse community (corals, clams, oysters, snails, brachiopods, plankton, forams, cocolithophores)

    Organic Sedimentary Rocks

     Made of organic carbon—the soft tissues of living things Coal—altered remains of

    fossil vegetation´ Accumulates in lush,

    tropical wetland settings

    ´ Requires deposition in the absence of oxygen

     Oil shale—shale with heat altered organic matter (Kerogen)

    Chemical Sedimentary Rocks Evaporites—from evaporated seawater

    ´ Evaporation causes minerals to precipitate.´ Thick deposits are the result of large volumes of water evaporating.´ Minerals include halite and gypsum.

     Travertine—precipitated from groundwater ´ Occurs when groundwater reaches the surface´ CO2 expelled into the air; reduced ability to hold carbonate.

    ´ Evaporation can also cause CaCO3 to precipitate.´ Example: thermal (hot) or cold water springs and cave settings

    ´ In cave settings, Travertine builds up complex growth forms speleothems

    Metamorphic Rocks

     Metamorphic rock—solid-state alteration of a protolith ´ Meta = change

    ´ Morphe = form

     Rocks which were originally igneous or sedimentary and have been changed by heat and pressure

     Rearrange the crystal structure of the original rock

     Limestone becomes marble; sandstone becomes quartzite, shale becomes slate

    Metamorphic Rocks Protoliths undergo slow solid-state changes in:

    ´ Mineralogy

    ´ Texture

     Metamorphic changes are due to variations in:´ Temperature

    ´ Pressure

    ´ Tectonic stresses (compression and shear)

    ´ Amount of reactive water (hydrothermal fluid)

    Types of Metamorphic Rocks

     Two major subdivisions—foliated and nonfoliated

    ´ Foliated—have a throughgoing planar fabric´ Subjected to differential stress´ Have a significant component of platy minerals

    ´ Classified by composition, grain size, and foliation type

    Foliation

     Foliation—Latin folium, for leaf´ Parallel planar surfaces or

    layers in metamorphic rock

    ´ Gives the rock a streaked or striped appearance

    ´ Foliated rocks often break along foliation planes

     Due to´ Preferred inequant mineral

    orientation, or

    ´ Compositional banding (dark and light layers)

    Foliated Metamorphic Rock

    Types of Metamorphic Rocks

     Nonfoliated—no planar fabric evident´Minerals recrystallized without

    compression or shear.

    ´Comprised of equant minerals only

    ´Classified by mineral composition

    NonFoliated Metamorphic Rock

    The Earth’s Rocks Are Recycled Slowly

     Rock cycle´Rocks are recycled over millions of years´Erosion, melting, and metamorphism´Slowest of the earth’s cycle processes

    The Earth Is a Dynamic Planet

    Minerals

    ´ Naturally occurring´ Solid´ Formed geologically´ Crystalline structure´ Definite chemical ´ composition´ Mostly inorganic

    28 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

    Mineral Classes

     Oxides (O2-)´ Metal cations (Fe2+, Fe3+,

    Ti2+) bonded to oxygen.´ Examples

    ´ Magnetite (Fe3O4)

    ´ Hematite (Fe2O3)´ Rutile (TiO2)

     Halides (Cl- or F-)´ Examples

    ´ Fluorite (CaF2)

    ´ Halite (NaCl)

    29 © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

    Mineral classes

     Carbonates (CO32-)

    ´ Examples

    ´ Calcite (CaCO3)

    ´ Dolomite (Ca, Mg[CO3]2)

     Native metals

    ´ Pure masses of a single metal

    ´ Examples

    ´ Copper (Cu)

    ´ Gold (Au)

    Mineral Classes

     Sulfides (S–)

    ´ Metal cations bonded to a sulfide anion.

    ´ Examples

    ´ Pyrite (FeS2)

    ´ Galena (PbS)

     Sulfates (SO42-)

    ´ Metal cation bonded to a sulfate anionic group.

    ´ Many sulfates form by evaporation of seawater.

    ´ Examples

    ´ Gypsum (CaSO42H2O)

    ´ Anhydrite (CaSO4)

    Mineral Classes

    ´ Oxygen and Silicon are the two most abundant elements in the crust.

     Silicates – Silica- 4 oxygen atoms surround a single silicon atom, forming (SiO4)4- Each oxygen atom covalently shares 1 electron with the silicon atom, jointly filling its outermost shell.

    Mineral Resources

     Naturally occurring mineral deposit

    ´ Concentrated

    ´ Can be extracted and used

    ´ Some are a single element

    ´ – Cu, Au, diamonds

    ´ Most are compounds

    ´ – NaCl, CaSO4

    ´ Metallic or nonmetallic

    ´ High and low-grade ores

    We Depend on a Variety of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources

     Ore ´Contains profitable concentration of

    a mineral´May be high-grade or low-grade

     Metallic mineral resources´Aluminum´Steel: a mixture of iron and other

    elements´Copper´Gold´Molybdenum

    We Depend on a Variety of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources

    ´ Nonmetallic mineral resources´Sand´Gravel´Limestone´Phosphate

    Life Cycle of a Mineral Resource

     Mineral resources go through life cycle´ Mining

    – Locate and extract´ Conversion to products

    – Purify useful mineral- Manufacture product

    ´ Disposal or recycling- Some minerals corrode away- Metals wear through friction- Some are pollutants- Metals commonly are recycled

    Supplies of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Can Be Economically Depleted

    ´ Reserves´Identified deposits from which we can extract the

    mineral profitably at current prices´ Economic depletion

    ´Occurs when extraction costs more than remaining deposits are worth

    ´ Depletion time´Time to use a certain portion (usually 80%) of reserves

    at a given rate of use

    Supplies of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Can Be Economically Depleted

    ´ Options when a resource becomes economically depleted´Recycle or reuse existing supplies´Waste less´Use less´Find a substitute´Do without

    What Are The Environmental Effects of Using Nonrenewable Mineral Resources?

    ´ Extracting minerals from the earth’s crust and converting them into useful products:´ Disturbs the land

    ´ Erodes soils

    ´ Produces large amounts of solid waste

    ´ Pollutes the air, water, and soil

    • Rock Cycle and Mineral Resources�
    • The Earth Is a Dynamic Planet
    • Slide Number 3
    • What Are Rocks?
    • Igneous Rocks
    • Slow Cooling – bigger minerals with distinct�crystal structure
    • Fast cooling – very fine grained, not crystalline
    • Intrusive vs Extrusive Rocks
    • Examples of Intrusive Igneous Rocks
    • Examples of Extrusive Igneous Rocks
    • Oceanic and Continental Crust
    • Sedimentary Rocks
    • Sedimentary Rocks
    • Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
    • Examples of Clastic Sedimentary Rocks
    • Biochemical Sedimentary Rocks
    • Organic Sedimentary Rocks
    • Chemical Sedimentary Rocks
    • Metamorphic Rocks
    • Metamorphic Rocks
    • Types of Metamorphic Rocks
    • Foliation
    • Foliated Metamorphic Rock
    • Types of Metamorphic Rocks
    • NonFoliated Metamorphic Rock
    • The Earth’s Rocks Are Recycled Slowly
    • The Earth Is a Dynamic Planet
    • Minerals
    • Mineral Classes
    • Mineral classes
    • Mineral Classes
    • Mineral Classes
    • Mineral Resources
    • We Depend on a Variety of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
    • We Depend on a Variety of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources
    • Life Cycle of a Mineral Resource
    • Supplies of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Can Be Economically Depleted
    • Supplies of Nonrenewable Mineral Resources Can Be Economically Depleted
    • What Are The Environmental Effects of Using Nonrenewable Mineral Resources?

                                                                                                                                      Order Now