Genre Nonfiction Comprehension Skill Summarize Text Features • • • • Charts Captions Diagrams Glossary Science Content Rocks and Minerals Scott Foresman Science 4.8 ISBN 0-328-13881-9 ì<(sk$m)=bdi be< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U Vocabulary igneous rock luster metamorphic rock mineral sediment sedimentary rock weathering What did you learn? 1. What are some of the words used to describe a mineral’s luster? 2. How do fossils help scientists figure out the age of a layer of rock? 3. What is magma? 4. Rocks can have by Mary Miller different forms during the rock cycle. Write to explain how rocks change from one form to another. Include details from the book to support your answer. 5. Picture Credits Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material. The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions. Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd). 15 Digital Stock. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the copyright © of Dorling Kindersley, a division of Pearson. ISBN: 0-328-13881-9 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V010 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 Summarize Explain the main differences between sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic rocks. Minerals Earth’s crust is made of a layer of rocks. All rocks are made of minerals. calcite garnet Scientists have identified more than three thousand minerals. Each mineral has crystals that form a unique shape. For example, a quartz crystal is six-sided, similar to the shape of your pencil. Topaz crystals can be very large. Some weigh over two hundred pounds. A mineral has the same chemical makeup no matter where it forms. Sulfur found in Florida has the same chemicals as sulfur found in Hawaii. About thirty minerals are found in Earth’s crust. These minerals are called the rock-forming minerals. Each kind of rock is made of a different mix of minerals. For example, hornblende granite is always made of feldspar, quartz, and mica. Some types of rock have only one or two minerals. A type of coal called anthracite is nearly all carbon. feldspar yellow sulfur Mineral Crystals opal Minerals are part of our everyday lives. The milk you drink contains a mineral called calcium that builds strong bones and teeth. The dirt in your school playground has minerals in it. Minerals are nonliving solid crystals that make up rocks. Minerals are not made by humans but are found in nature. 2 hornblende granite quartz mica 3 Mohs Scale for Hardness 9 10 co ru nd um di am on d to pa z tz qu ar ld sp ar ite ap at e 8 7 Hardness rock crystal Color Color is the most obvious property of a mineral because it is easy to see. However, a color test has limitations. Some minerals come in many different colors. For example, quartz can be purple, yellow, pink, or brown. Another problem is that many minerals are the same color, or even colorless. Luster Scientists also study a mineral’s luster. Luster is the way a mineral’s surface reflects light. The luster can be dull, metallic, pearly, glassy, greasy, or silky. A quartz rock crystal has a glassy luster. In contrast, pyrite has a metallic luster. Most minerals have a glassy luster. 4 6 5 4 fe smoky quartz 3 2 flu or it lc gy ps um ta Quartz can be many different colors. citrine 1 ci te Scientists use different tests to tell one mineral from another. They test its physical properties, such as color, luster, hardness, streak, and cleavage. ca l Identifying Minerals A mineral’s hardness is how easily it can be scratched. Scientists measure hardness using a chart called the Mohs Scale for Hardness. The scale ranks minerals from 1 to 10. A mineral with a high number can scratch all minerals lower on the scale. For example, a diamond is a 10. Feldspar is a 6. If a diamond is rubbed against a piece of feldspar, the diamond will scratch the feldspar. Streak The streak test is another way to tell minerals apart. A mineral is scratched across a special kind of plate. The color of the powder left behind is the mineral’s streak. Even though minerals can come in many colors, a mineral’s streak will always be the same color. For example, fluorite can look yellow, green, blue, purple, or even black. But its streak is always white. The streak test is one way to tell gold from “fool’s gold,” or pyrite. Real gold leaves a yellow streak. Pyrite leaves a greenish black streak. 5 Sedimentary Rocks Rock is always changing. Mountains and rocks are battered by natural forces. Rain, wind, and ice break down rocks into mineral particles. These particles are tossed together with bits of shells and soil. Dead plant and animal remains are also swept into this mix. Wind, running water, and gravity move these particles from one place to another. This is erosion. The eroded material that settles at the bottoms of lakes, rivers, and oceans is called sediment. The particles in sediment have different sizes and shapes. Some are smooth, while others have sharp edges. Ice wears away rock. Rivers carry bits of rock into the ocean. kinds of sedimentary rocks shale limestone sandstone Rock Layers Over time, new sediment flows over the old rock particles. The new layers press down on the older layers. The weight of the layers helps to cement the particles together. They harden and form sedimentary rock. The kind of sedimentary rock that is made depends on what makes up the sediment. Kinds of Sedimentary Rocks Wind wears away rock. Rock settles at the bottom of the ocean. 6 Most sedimentary rocks are formed by erosion. Rocks are broken down and moved to new places. These bits are cemented together to form new rocks. Sandstone can start with tiny quartz grains that are round in shape and uniform in size. The quartz mixes with grains of feldspar and sand. These tiny grains are glued together with bits of silica, calcite, or iron. 7 Some sedimentary rocks are formed in part from the remains of plants and animals. Most fossils are found in sedimentary rocks. When fish and other sea animals die, their bodies fall to the ocean floor. Their hard skeletons and shells are saved in the layers of sediment. Calcite and other dissolved minerals cement these layers together to create limestone. How Rocks Become Soil When an animal dies, it may sink to the ocean floor. It may become buried in the sediment. Soft parts of the animal decay, but hard parts are left. The fossil becomes part of the rock around it. The soil at your local park was once a large rock—or even part of a mountain. Over time, rocks are broken apart by heat and cold. Rainwater drips through cracks in the rock and freezes. When the ice thaws, it leaves behind even larger cracks. Deep-rooted plants can also dig into rocks and create grooves and cracks. Eventually, pieces of rock break off. These pieces are blown or washed away. This battering of rock by natural forces is called weathering. Over millions of years, even mountains can be worn down to a pile of rocks. These bits of weathered rock mix with decayed plants and animals to form soil. Soil contains living things, such as insects, bacteria, and fungi. These life forms make nutrients to help plants grow. Sometimes clay hardens into sedimentary rock. Tiny particles of clay settle at the bottoms of oceans and lakes. Over time these minerals harden to form mudstone or shale. Mudstone contains quartz, feldspar, and mica. It is used to make bricks and cement. Chemicals in shale can be used to make fuel and other products. Mudstone 8 9 How Fossils Develop Fossils are found in layers of rock. The age of a fossil can help scientists figure out the age of the rock layer. The Archaeopteryx had feathers like a bird but teeth and a tail like those of a reptile. It lived about 150 million years ago. An Archaeopteryx fossil found in a layer of rock means the layer formed in that time period. Scientists study fossils in rock layers to learn how animals and plants have changed over time. dinosaur eggs What Rocks Can Tell Us Some sedimentary rocks contain fossilized remains of life forms that existed millions of years ago. Many animals that once roamed Earth no longer exist. Fossils are our only record that they ever existed. Fossils give scientists clues about Earth’s history. They show how prehistoric plants and animals lived. Scientists might find fossilized footprints made by a dinosaur 100 million years ago. The distance between the footprints can tell scientists how fast the dinosaur could move. Fossils also give clues about prehistoric animal behavior. The discovery of fossilized nest eggs revealed that some dinosaurs laid eggs and took care of their young. Fossils of teeth can tell scientists if the animal was a meat or plant eater. 10 Cenozoic Era (65 million years ago to present)—Fossils show that large mammals and earliest humans appeared. Mesozoic Era (248 million to 65 million years ago)—Fossil evidence of dinosaurs is found in the rocks of this era. This is when dinosaurs became extinct. Paleozoic Era (544 million to 248 million years ago)—Fossils of early reptiles, insects, and fish are found in these rocks. Precambrian Era (more than 544 million years ago)— Life appeared. Rocks from this era have fossils of early jellyfish. Scientists use a geologic time scale to divide Earth’s history into time periods called eras. The earliest era is at the bottom of the chart. This order shows the ages of the layers of sedimentary rock. The oldest fossils are in the bottom layers. 11 Igneous And Metamorphic Rocks Sedimentary rocks are not the only kinds of rock found on Earth. The two other kinds are igneous rocks and metamorphic rocks. Igneous Rocks Many rocks are hard and can be broken into pieces. Sometimes rock melts. This is what happens to the layer of rock deep below Earth’s crust, where it is very hot. This molten rock is magma. Igneous rock forms from molten rock. Most of the ocean floor is a type of igneous rock named basalt. Igneous rocks can form above or below Earth’s surface. Sometimes hot magma explodes out of Earth’s crust when a volcano erupts. Magma that reaches Earth’s surface is called lava. The lava may stream down the sides of a volcano in a red-hot river. It can also be flung out of the volcano in hot chunks. Lava cools quickly on the surface. It can harden into solid rock in a few days. Most igneous rock, however, does not form this way. The magma slowly rises. It fills cracks in Earth’s crust. As the magma cools and hardens, mineral crystals form in the rock. The hardening of magma into igneous rock within Earth can take a very long time. 12 The Giant’s Causeway A causeway is a road built over water. Stone pillars may hold up these roads. The Giant’s Causeway is a natural formation of basalt columns on the coast of Northern Ireland. Nearly forty thousand pillars lead from the cliffs to the sea. Some reach a height of more than forty feet. Many of the columns are six-sided. The columns are 50 to 60 million years old. As flowing lava reached the sea, it cooled rapidly. As it cooled, pressure on the lava caused it to squeeze together. Cracks split the rock from top to bottom and formed the pillars. 13 The Rock Cycle zeolite crystals Marble forms from limestone. Metamorphic Rocks Over millions of years, rocks in Earth’s crust are squeezed by the weight of other rocks. This can cause rocks to change. Some rocks begin to melt. Rock that is changed by heat and pressure is called metamorphic rock. It has undergone a metamorphosis, or a change in form. Sedimentary and igneous rock can change into metamorphic rock. Limestone is a sedimentary rock. Pressure deep below Earth’s surface can turn it into marble. The igneous rock shale can become slate. Metamorphic rocks change in many ways as they are formed. The rocks’ mineral crystals can change. They may become new crystals that have a different size or shape. Sometimes the minerals settle in layers as a result of heat and pressure. This can cause some metamorphic rocks to break into flat slabs. 14 The rock cycle is the process in which old rocks recycle into new ones. Heat, pressure, weathering, and erosion help keep the rock cycle going. Sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic rocks can all change into a different kind of rock at any time. Metamorphic rock can melt into magma and later become igneous rock when the lava cools. Igneous rock can wear away, and its pieces can become sedimentary rock. All three kinds of rocks are made of minerals. These minerals have many properties that can be used to describe them. Different combinations of minerals form different kinds of rocks. The next time you see a rock, think about how many changes it will go through as it moves through the rock cycle. 15 What did you learn? Vocabulary Glossary igneous rock luster metamorphic igneous rock rock mineral sediment sedimentary rock weathering luster rock that is formed when magma or lava cools and hardens the way a mineral’s surface reflects light metamorphic rock rock changed by great heat and pressure inside Earth mineral a naturally occurring, nonliving crystal that makes up rocks sediment the eroded material that settles on the bottoms of lakes, rivers, and oceans Picture Credits Every effort has been made to secure permission and provide appropriate credit for photographic material. The publisher deeply regrets any omission and pledges to correct errors called to its attention in subsequent editions. sedimentary rock rock created as layers of sediment are weighed down 15 Digital Stock. and hardened together Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the copyright © of Dorling Kindersley, a division of Pearson. Photo locators denoted as follows: Top (T), Center (C), Bottom (B), Left (L), Right (R), Background (Bkgd). weathering ISBN: 0-328-13881-9 the battering of rocks by wind, rain, heat, and ice Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Printed in the United States of America. This publication is protected by Copyright, and permission should be obtained from the publisher prior to any prohibited reproduction, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or likewise. For information regarding permission(s), write to Permissions Department, Scott Foresman, 1900 East Lake Avenue, Glenview, Illinois 60025. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 V010 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 16 1. What are some of the words used to describe a mineral’s luster? 2. How do fossils help scientists figure out the age of a layer of rock? 3. What is magma? 4. Rocks can have different forms during the rock cycle. Write to explain how rocks change from one form to another. Include details from the book to support your answer. 5. Summarize Explain the main differences between sedimentary, igneous, and metamorphic rocks.
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