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5. Minerals which can be represented by a chemical formula.
Individual work
Task 1. Read the text and translate it into Ukrainian (in written form).
Build up a list of key terms to the text.
Physical Properties of Minerals
Optical Properties
Of the many optical properties of minerals, their luster, their ability to transmit
light, their
color, and their streak are most frequently used for mineral identification.
Luster. The appearance or quality of light reflected from the surface of a
mineral is known as luster. Minerals that have the appearance of metals, regardless of
colour, are said to have a metallic luster. Some metallic minerals, such as native copper
and galena, develop a dull coating or tarnish when exposed to the atmosphere. Because
they are not as shiny as samples with freshly broken surfaces, these samples are often
said to exhibit a submetallic luster. Most minerals have a nonmetallic luster and are
described using various adjectives such as vitreous or glassy. Other nonmetallic
minerals are described as having a dull or earthy luster (a dull appearance like soil) or a
pearly luster (such as a pearl or the inside of a clamshell). Still others exhibit a silky
luster (like satin cloth) or a greasy luster (as though coated in oil).
The ability to transmit light. Another optical property used in the identification
of minerals is the ability to transmit light. When no light is transmitted, the mineral is
described as opaque; when light, but not an image, is transmitted through a mineral it is
said to be translucent. When both light and an image are visible through the sample, the
mineral is described as transparent.
Colour. Although colour is generally the most conspicuous characteristic of any
mineral, it is considered a diagnostic property of only a few minerals. Slight impurities
in the common mineral quartz, for example, give it a variety of tints including pink,
purple, yellow, white, gray, and even black. Other minerals, such as tourmaline, also
exhibit a variety of hues, with multiple colors sometimes occurring in the same sample.
Thus, the use of colour as a means of identification is often ambiguous.
Streak. The colour of the mineral in powdered form, called streak, is often
useful in identification. A mineral’s streak is obtained by rubbing it across a streak plate
(a piece of unglazed porcelain) and observing the colour of the mark it leaves. Although
the colour of a mineral may vary from sample to sample, its streak is usually consistent
in colour. Streak can also help distinguish between minerals with metallic luster and
those with nonmetallic luster. Metallic minerals generally have a dense, dark streak,
whereas minerals with nonmetallic luster typically have a light coloured streak.
Task 2. Transcribe and pronounce the following words correctly: metallic,
galena, opaque, translucent, transparent, tourmaline, ambiguous.
Task 3. Answer the following questions:
1. What does the property of luster mean?
2. Do all the minerals transmit light?
3. Why is the property of streak important in mineral identification?
Test yourself
Task: Tell whether the sentences are true or false. Correct the false ones.
1. As early as 3700 BC, Egyptians began mining salt, silver, and quartz.
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