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Unit: Earth & Space Observatory: Chapter 6 The Lithosphere & The Hydrosphere

Unit: Earth & Space Observatory: Chapter 6 The Lithosphere & The Hydrosphere. Pages 182 - 219. General Information. It is 6300 km from the Earth’s surface to its centre. The hard shell is, on average, 100 km thick. Lithosphere. The lithosphere is the hard shell.

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Unit: Earth & Space Observatory: Chapter 6 The Lithosphere & The Hydrosphere

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  1. Unit: Earth & SpaceObservatory: Chapter 6The Lithosphere & The Hydrosphere Pages 182 - 219

  2. General Information • It is 6300 km from the Earth’s surface to its centre. • The hard shell is, on average, 100 km thick

  3. Lithosphere • The lithosphere is the hard shell. • It consists of both the crust and the top part of the upper mantel. • It contains all the minerals and rocks.

  4. Use diagram from 184 in TB

  5. Minerals • Minerals are inorganic substances that cannot be made.(not from animals nor plants) • With over 4000 minerals, each have certain characteristics or properties defined by their composition. • Cubic shape → salt (NaCl) • Gold (Au), Silver (Ag), Tin (Sn), etc. • Quartz → silicone dioxide (SiO2)

  6. Mineral Classification • Minerals can be classified according to: 1) Colour: – An ‘idiochromatic’ mineral is a specific colour since a certain element is present in its composition. (azurite, ruby, etc.) - An ‘allochromatic’ mineral is colourless when they are chemically pure. (quartz, diamonds, etc.)

  7. Example: Allochromatic Mineral Quartz

  8. Mineral Classification 2) Transparency: - how much light is able to pass through (transparent, translucent, opaque) 3) Hardness: - depends on strength of bonds between atoms - Mohs scale measures resistance to scratching (0 is liquid, 1 is softest (talc) and 10 is hardest (diamond))

  9. Mineral Classification 4) Streak: - after mineral is rubbed onto unglazed porcelain (idochromatic leaves brightly coloured powder) (allochromatic leaves white or pale powder)

  10. Mining Process • 1) Locate the mineral. • 2) Extract from lithosphere as an ‘ore’. • Ore is a rock that contains the mineral. • Deposit refers to a large quantity a mineral available for mining. • 3) Mineral is separated from ore. • Each ore is processed differently. • Gold is crushed, treated with chemicals and is melted. (500 kg ore yields 6 g)

  11. Type of Mines • 1) Open-pit mine • Deposit is found near the surface • Upper layers are removed by drilling machines, excavators, and dump trucks

  12. Type of Mines • 2) Mine Drift • Deposit is too far below the surface • Vertical shafts with drifts that run alongside the vein of the deposit • Each drift needs air ducts and water supply lines

  13. Rocks • Minerals can cluster together heterogeneously to form rocks. • There are two theories on the formation of rocks: • 1) Neptunism: by pressure of water • 2) Plutonism: by volcano

  14. Rock Types • 1. Igneous Rocks • Formed from solidified magma, • extrusive (hardens on contact with air) or • intrusive (hardens before reaching surface) • 2. Sedimentary Rocks • Formed from eroded rock fragments combine with plant and animal remains under pressure

  15. Rock Types • 3. Metamorphic Rocks • Formed from the transformation of igneous or sedimentary rocks into metamorphic rock under high temperature and pressure • Properties and appearance will change

  16. What rock is it? igneous sedimentary metamorphic

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