Rocks and Minerals B/C

alpacalypse
Member
Member
Posts: 1
Joined: Tue Sep 24, 2013 7:48 pm
Division: C
State: TX
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by alpacalypse »

This is my first year doing this event and I was wondering what should I know about the Sedimentary, Metamorphic, and Igneous rocks? I'm not really sure how to study for those.
User avatar
technomario
Member
Member
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon Oct 14, 2013 11:39 am
Division: C
State: PA
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by technomario »

Igneous= From lava or magma, slpit into 2 groups, inrusive= larger crystal size, underneath ground; extrusive= smaller crystal size, forms above ground
Sedimetary= formed from weathering and erosion, packed with liquification
Metamorphic= high heat and presure "metamorphizes" rock, depends on rock and amount of time under heat and pressure. Foliated vs Nonfoliated.

Those are the basics, but if you have hany questions on anything specific post a question and other people or I will be gladly to answer any further questions!
Henderson High School '16
Nick Luca
User avatar
gneissisnice
Exalted Member
Exalted Member
Posts: 930
Joined: Tue Mar 11, 2008 9:10 am
Division: Grad
State: NY
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 13 times

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by gneissisnice »

alpacalypse wrote:This is my first year doing this event and I was wondering what should I know about the Sedimentary, Metamorphic, and Igneous rocks? I'm not really sure how to study for those.
In terms of identification:

Rocks are different than minerals. Minerals always have a defined chemical formula, which gives them consistent properties. Rocks are made of minerals and therefore can have very different properties, so rocks are identified using different criteria.

Igneous rocks are classified based on two things: composition and grain size. Composition is basically just color. Light colors (white, gray, and pink) are found in felsic rocks. Dark colors (black, gray, and green) are found in mafic rocks. Intermediate is somewhere between the two. Grain size refers to the size of the crystals in the rock. They can be very coarse (very big), coarse (big), fine (small), or glassy (nonexistent). Crystals form over time, so the longer the magma had time to cool, the larger the crystals will be. Because of this, crystal size reflects where the rock formed; intrusive rocks (very coarse and coarse) formed inside the mantle while extrusive rocks (fine and glassy) formed from lava flows or eruptions above Earth's surface. All igneous rocks can be described by their color and composition: for example, a fine, mafic rock is basalt, while a coarse mafic rock is gabbro. There are charts you can find online that show everything in a simple way.

Sedimentary rocks are also classified by composition and grain size, but in a different way. Sedimentary rocks are made up of small rock fragments that have been cemented together rather than being made of crystals. The main thing that determines sedimentary rocks is grain size. From smallest to largest, the sizes are clay, silt, sand, pebbles, cobbles, boulders (the last two aren't important for sedimentary rocks, they're too big). You can also describe the clasts (the sediments) in terms of roundedness, or sphericity. And lastly, you can also talk about sorting, which describes how similar the clasts are to each other in size and shape (important in geology, less important for this Scio event). What I just described were clastic rocks, but there are two other types of sedimentary rocks. Bioclastic rocks are similar, but they are made up of material that came from living organisms. They're divided into coals (plant remains), limestones (calcium carbonate shell remains), and diatomite (made from siliceous diatom remains). Chemical rocks form when you have chemical rich fluid evaporite, leaving the chemicals behind (for example, you have hot springs rich in calcium carbonate. The water evaporates, leaving the calcium carbonate behind, forming travertine).

Metamorphic rocks are rocks that have been changed by heat and pressure. The foliated rocks form a progression, going from slate to phyllite to schist to gneiss, increasing in foliation. Gneiss has extreme foliation, and shows banding (alternating light and dark bands). Non-foliated rocks can be a bit hard to identify, in my opinion. Marble and quartzite can look similar, but marble will fizz in acid and quartzite will scratch glass. Luckily, those are the only non-foliated rocks you have to know, amphibolite and hornfels are never on the list.

I hope that helped.
2009 events:
Fossils: 1st @ reg. 3rd @ states (stupid dinosaurs...) 5th @ nats.
Dynamic: 1st @ reg. 19thish @ states, 18th @ nats
Herpetology (NOT the study of herpes): NA
Enviro Chem: 39th @ states =(
Cell Bio: 9th @ reg. 18th @ nats
Remote: 6th @ states 3rd @ Nats
Ecology: 5th @ Nats
Flavorflav
Member
Member
Posts: 1386
Joined: Sun Feb 05, 2006 7:06 am
Division: Grad
State: NY
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by Flavorflav »

magtse wrote:Hello,

Hope It's the right 'area' to post this question, I am helping my daughter prep for Rocks & Minerals Div B. On the coaching material it says coach (i guess that's me!) should purchase inexpensive quartz crystals. May I ask if there are any suggestions on where to get them? Is there any particular types (clear, natural,etc?) Saw these sites but it has so many choices that I am not sure which to pick. If anyone can pin point a specific link or something that I can look to as a guidance it would be greatly appreciated.
http://www.healingcrystals.com/
http://www.bestcrystals.com/crystals2.html

Tks....
:? M
It's not cheap, but you can get almost all of them from Ward's: https://www.wardsci.com/store/catalog/p ... er=2363100
User avatar
hexagonaria
Member
Member
Posts: 212
Joined: Wed Jul 14, 2010 11:00 pm
Division: C
State: OH
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by hexagonaria »

So have any of you ever actually seen something rare/expensive like diamond or silver or gold in a competition? What's the most unexpected specimen you've encountered?
DFTBA
User avatar
darkdeserthighway
Member
Member
Posts: 239
Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 3:35 pm
Division: Grad
State: NY
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by darkdeserthighway »

hexagonaria wrote:So have any of you ever actually seen something rare/expensive like diamond or silver or gold in a competition? What's the most unexpected specimen you've encountered?
I've seen gold in competitions before, although it was a very small sample.
2015 States- Invasives 10th, Fossils 12th
2014 States- Rocks and Minerals 3rd
2013 States- Rocks and Minerals 7th, Water Quality 9th
2012 States- Rocks and Minerals 10th
ali941
Member
Member
Posts: 54
Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2013 3:03 pm
Division: C
State: CA
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by ali941 »

darkdeserthighway wrote:
hexagonaria wrote:So have any of you ever actually seen something rare/expensive like diamond or silver or gold in a competition? What's the most unexpected specimen you've encountered?
I've seen gold in competitions before, although it was a very small sample.
Last year was my first year in SciOly, and at my first invitational, there was apparently a decent-sized piece of uncut, unpolished diamond. I say apparently because it was at a station with four other clear-white minerals and I was unable to identify it.
2013 Events:
Sounds of Music, Rocks and Minerals, Dynamic Planet, Metric Mastery: 2nd, Regionals

Hopeful 2014 events:
Dynamic Planet, Rocks and Minerals, Technical Problem Solving, Designer Genes, Astronomy*, MagLev*

IM AN ALICORN
The sky ain't sky blue. Who'da thunk it?
User avatar
darkdeserthighway
Member
Member
Posts: 239
Joined: Sat Dec 29, 2012 3:35 pm
Division: Grad
State: NY
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by darkdeserthighway »

ali941 wrote:
darkdeserthighway wrote:
hexagonaria wrote:So have any of you ever actually seen something rare/expensive like diamond or silver or gold in a competition? What's the most unexpected specimen you've encountered?
I've seen gold in competitions before, although it was a very small sample.
Last year was my first year in SciOly, and at my first invitational, there was apparently a decent-sized piece of uncut, unpolished diamond. I say apparently because it was at a station with four other clear-white minerals and I was unable to identify it.
Was anything provided at that station to help with ID?
2015 States- Invasives 10th, Fossils 12th
2014 States- Rocks and Minerals 3rd
2013 States- Rocks and Minerals 7th, Water Quality 9th
2012 States- Rocks and Minerals 10th
vxpvm
Member
Member
Posts: 10
Joined: Sat Nov 09, 2013 8:49 pm
Division: C
State: CA
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by vxpvm »

Has anyone here ordered the kit from the rocks and minerals list? From Lee's Summit? Do you guys find that it's a reliable source, and if so, how would I go about ordering it? Do I just send an envelope with a check to their PO box with my address on it? My school is pretty small, so we don't actually have a geology department where I can go look at things in person ...
ali941
Member
Member
Posts: 54
Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2013 3:03 pm
Division: C
State: CA
Has thanked: 0
Been thanked: 0

Re: Rocks and Minerals B/C

Post by ali941 »

darkdeserthighway wrote:
ali941 wrote: Last year was my first year in SciOly, and at my first invitational, there was apparently a decent-sized piece of uncut, unpolished diamond. I say apparently because it was at a station with four other clear-white minerals and I was unable to identify it.
Was anything provided at that station to help with ID?
I mean, there were distinct differences in the samples, my partner and I just weren't prepared enough to recognize it. Plus, we did bring our own magnifying glass, which was somewhat helpful.
2013 Events:
Sounds of Music, Rocks and Minerals, Dynamic Planet, Metric Mastery: 2nd, Regionals

Hopeful 2014 events:
Dynamic Planet, Rocks and Minerals, Technical Problem Solving, Designer Genes, Astronomy*, MagLev*

IM AN ALICORN
The sky ain't sky blue. Who'da thunk it?

Return to “2014 Study Events”