How and Why Wonder Book of Rocks and Minerals
How and Why Wonder Book of Rocks and Minerals
How and Why Wonder Book of Rocks and Minerals
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HOW
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WHY
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MINERALS
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ROCK,SA D
MIN.ERALS
By Nelson W. Hyler
Illustrated by Kenyon Shannon
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INTRODUCTION
In an age of rockets and missiles, the study of rocks and minerals is
no less important - and in this colorful How and Why Wonder Book, we
see why it is so important. We learn that our modern age of rockets would
not even be possible without minerals from the earth's crust. We learn the
answers to dozens of important questions about the earth's surface and the
changes that take place in it.
Anyone who has ever picked up a rounded pebble, a curiously shaped
rock or a sparkling gem and handled it with wonder knows the urge to collect. The chances are that almost everyone who has walked in a field, along
a stream or in a park has pocketed a sample of rock or mineral to examine
and enjoy later. What is it? How was it made? Is it valuable? This How and
Why Wonder Book about rocks and minerals is useful because it helps to
answer these and other questions. In addition, it tells how to start and how to
organize a rock collection. It is a helpful guide for parents and children
who want to study rocks together.
Scientists who study the earth's surface are called geologists, and this
book will help children explore the big questions which geologists are studying. It surely should take its place with the other How and Why Wonder
Books on the library shelves of all science-minded young readers.
Paul E. Blackwood
1971 Printing
Copyright 1960, 1969 by Grosset & Dunlap. Inc.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
Published simultaneously in Canada.
Printed in the United States of America.
CONTENTS
Page
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
12
13
14
16
17
18
20
21
22
24
25
26
28
29
30
31
ROCK-FORMING MINERALS
What are some of the rock-forming
minerals?
IDENTIFICATION OF ROCKS
AND MINERALS
How do we begin to identify rocks
and minerals?
How can you tell how hard a rock or
mineral is?
THE SCALE OF HARDNESS
MINERALS
What are the hardness minerals?
SIMPLE TESTS
How can you tell what kind of rock
it is?
How can you test a rock or mineral for
weight?
FOSSILS
What is a fossil?
Why do we study fossils?
Where are fossils found?
RARE STONES
What makes a mineral a gem stone?
PUMICE
What is pumice?
COAL
What is coal?
ASBESTOS
What is asbestos?
ICE
What is ice?
START A ROCK AND MINERAL
COLLECTION
How do you begin a rock and mineral
collection?
What will you need to collect rocks
and minerals?
How can you keep your rocks and minerals?
IDENTIFICATION CHART OF
MAJOR SPECIMENS
32
34
35
36
39
39
40
41
42
43
44
44
45
45
46
47
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48
ALMOST all of
/-\. the earth the hills, the mountains, the ground
itself - is made of rocks and minerals.
There are many different kinds, and
it would take a long time just to write
down all their names. Yet, most of the
rocks and minerals on earth are very
common.
Sand is a common mineral. It is common because it is found everywhere.
Water is another common mineral.
We find it in the streams and in the
What is our
earth made of?
Why do we
study about
rocks and mfoerals?
E LIVE in
a wonderful
world. It is full of
interesting things
and it is fun to learn about things.
Almost all of our world - even the
inside of the world - is made of rocks
and minerals. We study them to learn
about our world.
Every day we use something made of
rocks or minerals. But often they have
been changed. They do not look the
same.
Glass does not look like sand. Yet
glass is made from sand. The ink that
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ROCKS
OCKS are
made of minerals. A few are
made of just one mineral, but most of
them are made of many minerals. There
are many kinds of rocks.
Very small rocks are called sand.
Very small sand is like sugar or salt.
The individual grains are so small that
they are hard to see.
Rocks bigger than sand have other
names, like pebbles, or stones. Big
rocks are called boulders. Some of them
may be as big as a house.
Rocks are big and little. They have
different shapes and sizes. Rocks are
sometimes round like a ball, or square
like a block.
Rocks are of many colors. You can
find red rocks, blue rocks and yellow
rocks. Often rocks are made of mixed
colors. When you look, you can find
them of almost every color.
What is
a rock?
OCKS are
found almost
everywhere. The
most common place is outdoors on the
ground. Most of the ground is made up
of big and little rocks.
Rocks are found at the seashore.
Even the tiny pieces of sand are count. less little rocks that make up the beach.
The waves of the ocean wash and roll
the sand around.
Outdoors you can find many rocks.
You can find rocks in the hills, in the
valleys and in rivers and streams. ,
The rocks in the rivers and streams
are smooth and round. The water
moves along and pushes them around.
The rocks then become smooth and
round by rubbing arid bumping against
each other.
In this way sharp rocks are broken
into smaller rocks and in time are made
smooth and round. Rocks are being
changed all the time by moving water .
Are rocks
found everywhere?
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MINERALS ARE ALL AROUND US_.: AT HOME, IN SCHOOL AND OUTDOORS. THE
KITCHEN IN YOUR HOME USUALLY HAS MANY THINGS MADE OF MINERALS.
MINERALS
What is
MINERAL
is a chemical element or a
combination of chemical elements. Minerals are all around us and they are
easily found almost everywhere. In
fact, it may be said th.a t anything that
is not an animal or a vegetable is a
mineral.
You should be able to look around
as you read this book and see some of
these minerals. Can you see a window?
The glass is a mineral. Can you see a
dish? Can you see any kitchen pots and
pans? These and. other household artia mineral?
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VOLCANOES
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N ACTIVE
volcano is
one that is said to
be "erupting." It shoots out steam, ash
and hot rocks. Such a volcano is working and it is active.
Millions of years ago there were.
many active volcanoes. They were working in many places. Some were working
here in America.
A volcano begins deep down in the
earth, where it is very hot. It is so hot
that the rock has turned into magma a name for very hot rock.
Deep in the earth there is much hot
What is an
active volcano?
10
magma, which is sometimes pushed upward by pressure from the heavy rocks
all around it. Finally the hot magma
reaches the top of the ground. Here it
breaks a little crack or hole in the earth.
Steam, ashes and hot rocks come out.
Loud noises come from it as the
rocks are blown out. The rocks pile up
around the hole and the pile begins to
form a cone about the crack in the
earth. The cone is made up of rock,
ashes and material thrown out of the
volcano.
This is the beginning of a little volcano. Day after day it works and grows.
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A DORMANT VOLCANO
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IGNEOUS ROCKS-ONE OF
What is an
igneous rock?
GNEOUS is the
name of one of
the th:ree big
groups of rocks. Igneous rocks were
made in a special way.
The word igneous means made from.
fire or heat. Therefore, all igneous rocks
have been formed by heat.
Deep down in the earth it is very hot.
The rocks and minerals there are very
hot. The heat has helped to change
these rocks and miner~ls into molten
rock, called magma.
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BASALT CLIFF
TH E T HREE BIG
GROUPS OF ROCKS
GOOD place
to find ig neous rocks is
near old volcanoes.
These rocks. were
made when the vol'
canoes were still active. Today you can
still find the rocks they made.
Many different kinds of rocks are
found near the old volcanoes. Lava is
one. It is a common igneous rock.
Lava in the form of molten rock
pours out of a crack in the side of a
volcano. It runs steaming down the side
of the volcano and over everything in
its path.
Where do
igneous rocks
come from?
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RANITE is
one of our
most common igneous rocks, made
deep under the ground.
Granite is made of quartz, feldspar
and mica. These are all minerals.
Quartz and feldspar are light-colored.
They make granite a light-colored rock.
The little bits of mica in granite make
the dark spots.
Granite may be colored red, pink,
yellow or brown. Often ~t is a mixture
of colors in between.
Are there
many kinds of
igneous rocks?
GRANITE
FELSITE
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FELSITE rocks are made from fastcooling lava. The lava cools too fast
to tum into granite or basalt. The lava
cools too slowly to make obsidian, another kind of igneous rock. It cools
just right and turns into felsite.
Felsite rocks are usually made from
light-colored lavas. These rocks are
often colored light gray, green, yellow
or even red.
15
HEAVY CRANES ARE USED BY WORKERS IN QUARRIES TO LIFT BIG ROCKS. IN THIS GRANITE
QUARRY, A MAN GUIDES THE MOVEMENT OF A ROCK WHICH HAS BEEN RAISED UP BY A CRANE.
ROCK QUARRIES
QUARRY is
a large open
hole in the ground
or the side of a hill. It is a place where
rocks and stones are dug out.
There are many kinds of rock quarries. One kind will have granite rocks.
Another will have sandstone and there
are some quarries of marble, too.
Big machines help the workers take
the rock out of a granite quarry. The
big rocks are used to build many things,
What is
a quarry?
16
EROSION
Does the
earth
wear out?
OLCANOES
are land builders. They help to
make the land
higher. But the land does not stay built
up. It keeps wearing away. Day after
day and year after year, the wind and
the water help to wear away the land.
The wind may blow dirt, sand and
so_il into a nearby stream. The stream
carries the dirt, sand and s_oil to the
sea. Day after day the earth is washed
away by running water.
You may have seen a muddy stream
or river. It was carrying the earth
toward the sea. This is the way the wind
and the water are taking away the
earth.
Not all streams lead to the sea. Some
end in lakes or other streams. These
streams carry material into the lakes.
In time the lake fills up with mud, dirt,
sand and the like. When this happens,
the lake turns into a shallow marsh. In
time the marsh. may dry up. This is another place from which the wind and
water may take away the land.
When the land is being moved by the
wind or water, we say it is eroding. The
process of erosion is going on all of the
time. It may be helpful, but more often
it is harmful in destroying much valuable land.
ON SEACOASTS, OCEAN WAVES ERODE
THE LAND. THE WAVES CARRY LOOSE BITS
OF ROCK. THESE BITS OF ROCK, PLUS THE
FORCE OF THE WAVES AGAINST THE LAND,
WEAR AWAY THE EARTH .
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SEDIMENTARY ROCKS
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TIR up a
handful of
dirt in a glass of
water. At first the water will be cloudy.
But if the water is left alone, the dirt
will settle to the bottom of the glass. In
,time the water will be clear again.
The dirt that has settled to the bottom of the glass is called sediment.
From this word comes the name sedimentary, the name for the second big
group of rocks.
This kind of rock was formed by
sediment from rivers and streams.
Every day the streams and rivers bring
more and more mud, sand and rock to
the seas. These settle to the bottom
and are called sediment.
The big rocks settle first. They sink
first because they are bigger and heavier.
Next the sand and then the mud sinks
to the bottom of the sea. In this way
different layers are built up. The layers build up on the sea bottom year
after year until they are very thick.
Are there rocks
under the water?
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VOLCANIC TUFF IS SEDIMENTARY ROCK. TUFF IS COMPOSED OF MANY LAYERS OF VOLCANIC ASHES AND DUST.
THESE LAYERS BUILT UP AROUND ACTIVE VOLCANOES.
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MOON SHELL
SCALLOP
CLAM
LIMESTONE
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EDIMENTARYrocks
were formed under
the seas and
oceans. The sedimentary rocks built up
higher and higher in some places. This
made the sea ' bottom rise higher and
higher.
Millions of years went by. In some
places the sea bottom rose slowly. If it
rose high enough, it came out of the
water.
The land that came out of the water
was made of sediment. Below the top
layers of sediment were sedimentary
rocks. You can see these rocks today
near the seashore.
Where are
sedimentary
rocks found?
NEAR THE SEASHORE, YOU CAN SEE SEDIMENT ARY ROCK. LAYERS OF SEDIMENT DEPOSITS IN THE WATER ROSE HIGHER AND
HIGHER. AFTER MANY YEARS, SEDIMENTARY
ROCK EMERGED FROM THE WATER.
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ONGLOMERATE is a
sedimentary rock.
It is made of a mixture of smooth round stones and
pebbles. The larger stones in a conglomerate rock are held together by
another kind of stone, either limestone
,
or sandstone.
Conglomerate rock is made in old
streams and river beds. The large stones
are washed down the stream. Then, in
a quiet pool, the rocks sink to the bottom and pile up.
More rocks and sand continue to pile
up in the old stream bed. In time the
big and little rocks become changed
into conglomerate rock.
Are there
many kinds of
sedimentary rocks?
CONGLOMERATE
SANDSTONE
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LIMESTONE
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METAMORPHIC ROCKS
LIMESTONE
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MARBLE
Why do rocks
have different
HE NAME
metamorphic
shapes and colors?
means "to have
been changed." This name is used to tell
about rocks that have been changed in
some way. This is the third and last big
group of rocks.
Metamorphic rocks began as one
kind of rock and later were changed
into another kind. All of them began
once as igneous or sedimentary rocks.
The new rocks do not look the same,
for in becoming metamorphic rocks
their structure and often their color
change.
24
Where do
metamorphic
rocks come from?
EDIMEN-
TARYrocks
are made deep under the .seas and
ocean bottoms. Sometimes a sea goes
dry. The land moves up and the sedimentary rocks are exposed.
In time the wind and rain wear down
the top layers of rock. Then another
kind of rock is exposed. The rock exposed is metamorphic rock.
To find metamorphic r~ck, you must
visit a place where the land has been
wearing down for many years. There
are piaces in the eastern United States
and a few in the West where one can see
this kind of rock. There are also many
metamorphic rocks far north in Canada.
Sometimes metamorphic rocks can
be found where old volcanoes once
stood. The red hot lava from them often
changed other rocks into metamorphic
rocks.
This type of metamorphic rock could
occur where the volcano pushed its way
up through the earth, passing through
a sediment layer on the way. Here the
heat helped to change the sedimentary
rock into metamorphic rock.
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LATE is a
metamormetamorphic rocks?
phic rock made
from the sedimentary rock shale. When shale is changed
by heat and pressure, it turns into slate.
Slate and shale have the same colors,
but they do not look alike. They look
different because of how they break.
The way that they break helps to tell
them apart.
Slate breaks into smooth fiat sheets
of rock. You can split it into very thin
pieces, which make fine steppingstones.
The finest blackboards are made of
slate that has been split into thin sheets.
One side is then polished very smooth
before it is used for a blackboard.
Shale will notbreak into smooth fiat
sheets of rock. It breaks only into odd
sh~pes. This stone has little use because
of the way in which it breaks.
Are there
many .kinds of
SLATE
CHLORITE SCHIST
SERPENTINE
BLACK MARBLE
SERPENTINE is a metamorphic
rock often colored green. Some serpentine rocks are light green and some are
dark green. This stone is slippery to
touch. It feels as if it were covered with
wax or soap.
When this rock is exposed to the
weather, it soon breaks down and
crumbles away.
WHITE MARBLE
EPIDOTE
AMAZONITE (or Amazon stone)
SULPHUR
Orthorhombic System
Triclinic System
Monoclinic System
C .R YSTALS
What is
a crystal?
HERE are
non-living
substances which
grow into bodies of various shapes.
They grow by adding on more layers
of the same substance, keeping the same
shape at all times. These bodies of
various shapes are called crystals. Most
solid substances, like minerals, are crystalline; that is, they are made up of
crystals. So a crystal is really another
form of rocks and minerals, except that
the word "crystal" tells us that the rock
or mineral is of a certain shape.
These different crystal shapes, which
help us to tell the minerals apart, are
grouped into six main kinds or systems:
Cubic System, Tetragonal System, Hexagonal System, Orthorhombic System,
Monoclinic System and Triclinic System. Examples of the six different
shapes may be seen in the crystal forms
shown on this page.
When minerals are first formed, they
often turn into crystals. It takes a long
time to make big crystals, but some little
crystals can be made in two days.
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CALCITE
Hexagonal System
RUTILE
Tetragonal System
HALITE (salt)
Cubic System
ERE is a way
to make some
crystals of your
own. Salt crystals are easy to make.
Stir three tablespoons full of salt into
a cup of warm water. As you stir the
water, the salt will disappear. In a few
minutes you will not be able to see the
salt crystals. They have disappeared
into the water.
Next pour the salty water into a pie
pan. Set the pan where it will be warm.
Salt crystals will grow faster in a warm
place.
How can you
make a crystal?
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MIN ER AL FOODS
Where does the
salt we eat
come from?
UCH OF
our salt is
made near the seashore, in large flat
ponds filled with sea water. This water
contains lots of salt.
Day after day the hot sun shines and
warms the sea water in the pond. Warm
sea water helps the . salt crystals to
form.
As each day goes by, a little more
water disappears by evaporation. Salt
crystals form in the water that is left.
After many days, the sea water is all
gone and only the salt is left behind.
The salt has formed as white crystals
on the bottom of the dry pond.
When the pond is dry, workmen can
gather the salt. The salt is put into little
boxes for us to use. Everyone uses salt
crystals left behind by the sea water.
Many years ago salt was difficult to
get in some countries. Workmen have
even been paid wages with salt, instead
of money!
This kind of salt has another name
- halite. Halite is the mineral name
for salt, but most of the time halite is
just called salt.
ou MAY
be
surprised to
learn that every
day you eat many
different minerals besides salt. These
minerals are very helpful to you.
Water is a very common mineral. It
is the most important mineral you use.
Some of it is in the food you eat. Other
water is in the milk you drink. Your
body needs some water every day.
You only need to eat very tiny
amounts of the other minerals which
are found in foods. They cannot be
seen because there are only tiny bits of
them. But they are very important.
Iron is an important mineral used to
make cars and other things. It is also a
mineral you need to eat. It is found in
eggs and liver. Calcium is a mineral
found in cheese, and it helps to make
strong bones. Iodine is a mineral needed
to keep your body healthy. Iodine is
often mixed with the salt you eat.
All of these minerals and many more
are found in the food you eat. You need
to eat many different kinds of food because each kind has different minerals.
They help you to build a healthy body.
Can we eat
minerals?
CHEESE (calcium)
SALT (iodine)
FISH (phosphorus)
31
ROCK-FORMING MINERALS
OCKS are
made from
one or more kinds
of minerals. Granite is a rock made from three kinds of
minerals - quartz, feldspar and mica.
Quartz, feldspar and mica are rockforming minerals. They are called that
because they make rocks, like granite.
QUARTZ is one of the most com~
mon rock-forming minerals and is found
in all the big groups of rocks - igneous,
sedimentary and metamorphic rocks.
Some quartz is colorless, like ice.
What are some of
the rock-forming
minerals?
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CITRINE QUARTZ
SMOKY QUARTZ
AMETHYST QUARTZ
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ROSE QUARTZ
MICROCLINE FELDSPAR
IDENTIFICATION OF ROCKS
AND MINERALS
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HERE ARE
several ways
to identify rocks
and minerals. First
you will have to make some tests. These
tests are easy to do and will help you to
know more about rocks and minerals .
Each test you make will tell you
more about your new rock, until at last
you will be able to tell the rock's name.
You must not expect to be able to
name every new rock or mineral at first.
In the beginning you will be able to .
name only a few. It takes a long time
to learn most of the names of the rocks
and minerals.
One of the first tests you will make
is to ask yourself, "Where did this rock
come from?" Is it an igneous rock? Or
does it look more like a sedimentary
rock? It might be even a metamorphic
rock!
You would first like to know what
general kind of rock it is. When you
know where it came from, you can often
tell what general kind it is.
Once you know if it is an igneous,
sedimentary or metamorphic rock, you
can make .some other t~ .
How do we begin
to identify rocks
and minerals?
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A PENNY IS HARDER THAN YOUR FINGERNAIL AND CAN SCRATCH CALCITE, AS WELL
AS TALC AND GYPSUM.
NE of the
most important tests you can
make on a specimen is to find out how hard it is. Hard. ness tells you how easy it is to scratch
one mineral with another. Some minerals are very soft. Others are very hard.
If you know how hard or soft a
specimen is, it will help you to tell it
apart from other minerals.
Geologists, for a long time, have used
ten minerals to test for hardness. These
ten minerals are called the Scale of
Hardness minerals.
Each mineral on the scale has a number as well as a name. You have already
read about the names of some, and
others will be new to you.
There are also some common things
that will help you to test for hardness.
One of these testers you have with you
all of the time - your fingernail which will scratch at least Jwo minerals.
A penny can also be used to scratch
certain minerals, and a small pocket
knife is another common tester. Its blade
will scratch still other minerals. Each
mineral can also scratch itself. You will
read about these and others in the discussion about the "Scale of Hardness"
minerals, beginning on the next page.
These minerals have been arranged
in order. The softest mineral is number
one and the hardest is number ten.
Those minerals in b~tween will vary,
each higher-numbered mineral being
harder than the one before.
How can you tell
how hard a
rock or mineral is?
35
UMBER 1.
TALC: Talc
is a metamorphic
mineral. It is the softest of the minerals
in the scale. You can scratch talc with
your fingernail.
Talcum powder is made from groundup talc. Of course, the nice smell is put
in after the talc is ground up.
GYPSUM
CALCITE
FLUORITE
QUARTZ
Number 5. APATITE: Apatite is another mineral that forms beautiful crystals of many different colors. Some of
these colors are white, brown, green,
violet, blue and yellow. Yellow is the
most common color.
You can scratch apatite with a knife,
too. Apatite in turn will scratch any of
the.hardness minerals below it. Apatite,
like each of the other minerals, is able to
scratch itself.
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DIAMOND
SIMPLE TESTS
How can you
tell what kind
of rock it is?
OU CAN test
for the name
of a rock or mineral with a streak plate. A streak plate
is made of unglazed tile.
Many specimens leave a colored
streak when they are rubbed on the
streak plate .. The color of the streak
helps to name the rock. You can make
red, blue, black and many other colored
streaks. Some samples will not even
make a streak!
A SIMPLE WAY TO TEST ROCKS AND MINERALS FOR WEIGHT IS TO HOLD A DIFFERENT
SPECIMEN IN EACH HAND. EVEN THOUGH
BOTH ROCKS ARE OF THE SAME SIZE, ONE
WILL WEIGH MORE THAN THE OTHER.
ou
CANNOTlookata
rock or mineral
and tell how heavy
it is. Yet, some minerals or rocks are
much heavier than others. When you
pick up a sample rock, you can tell if
it seems heavy or light.
When you try this with a different
rock in each hand, you can tell which is
the heavier. Both samples must be about
the same size, of course. You will be
surprised to see how easily you can tell
the difference in weight between two
rocks. Whether the rock is heavy or
light may help to tell its name.
More advanced books will show you
other ways of finding the weight of a
rock or mineral.
How can you
test a rock
or mineral
for weight?
39
FOSSILS
FOSSIL is the
remains of
some animal or
plant which is no longer living. It has
been dead for many years and only part
of the animal or plant is left today. This
part is called a fossil.
Clams often turn into fossils. Here
is how this can happen.
When a clam dies, the soft parts of
its body soon rot away. But the shell
of the clam is very hard. It is made of
calcium, like our bones, and cannot rot
away. The shell sinks to the sand at the
bottom of the sea.
Many years pass and other shells join
the first shell. Fine sand washes over
the shells and buries them. In time
the sand changes into sandstone. But
the shells are still there, buried with the
sandstone.
Millions of years go by and the sea
. bottom becomes dry land. The sandstone can now be seen.
If you should dig down into the sandstone, you would find the old dam
shells. You would call them fossils now.
They are called that because fossils are
hardened traces of animals or plants
which have been preserved in the earth.
.W hat is
a fossil?
THE WORD FOSSIL COMES FROM A LATIN WORD MEANING "DUG UP." THE DISCOVERY OF
FOSSIL REMAINS OF ANIMALS ON LAND AND IN THE SEA HAS GIVEN SCIENTISTS MUCH
INFORMATION ABOUT THE WORLD AS IT WAS MILLIONS OF YEARS AGO.
Why do we
OME day
you may find
a fossil. You will
want to know its name. You may ask
yourself, "Where did this come from?
Is it an animal or is it a rock? How did
it get here? Is it valuable?" These and
many other questions may occur to you.
The scientists who search for fossils
and study them are known as paleontologists. By learning of life and changes
that occurred on earth in the past, tb_ey
can supply answers for the future.
study fossils?
.I
NE of the best
places to look
for fossils is in sedimentary rocks. Soft shale and sandstone
often have fossils in them. These are
both sedimentary rocks.
Limestone is a sedimentary rock
made up of millions of tiny shells of sea
animals. Sometimes the shells of the
animals can be seen in the limestone.
You could think of this kind of limestone as "fossil stone."
Where are
fossils found?
I
I
I;
I I
RARE STONES
EM stones are
rare and more
difficult to find
than ordinary
rocks. They are harder to find because
there are not so many of them. If a
stone is hard to find, if it is beautiful,
and if it can be polished, it then becomes valuable. This kind of stone is
named a gem stone.
For hundreds of years men have
looked for valuable gem stones and
minerals. Today other men are still
. hunting for new places to find gem
stones.
A ruby is a beautiful red-colored
gem stone. When a ruby is polished, it
sparkles and shines. The color of the
ruby helps to make it valuable.
Other gem stones are opals, pearls,
emeralds and diamonds. Emeralds and
diamonds are the most expensive and
rarest gem stones. All gem stones are
beautiful. Gem stones are used m
jewelry. They are often set in rings.
What makes
a mineral
a gem stone?
STAR SAPPHIRE
EMERALD
SAPPHIRE
OPAL
DIAMOND
RUBY
43
PUMICE
UMICE is an
pumice?
igneous rock.
It is made by volcanoes. Sometimes
the volcano throws out gobs of molten
rock. Little holes grow in the rock before it cools. These holes are caused by
steam or gas trapped in the molten
rock. The holes in pumice look just
like the holes in a loaf of bread!
Pumice is a stone that can float on
water! It floats on water because it is
so very light.
This stone is used to polish fine furniture and to make building materials.
What is
PUMICE
COAL
COAL
What is
OAL IS A
sedimentary
rock that will burn.
Coal burns just as wood does. It is used
to build warm fires.
Coal was made millions of years ago.
This rock is made from plants, and
trees or ferns that lived long ago.
These trees and plants became buried
just like fossils. In time they turned into
c9al. Coal is really the remains of many
trees and plants. You can think of coal
as "fossil wood."
Coal deposits are found all over the
United States. The largest and best ones
are in the eastern part of our country.
coal?
44
ICE
ICE
CE IS THE colorless mineral
. that floats in
water! Ice is really
a water crystal, formed when the temperature of water or moisture in the air
reaches the freezing point, indicated by
32 on the Fahrenheit thermometer or
0 on the centigrade thermomet_er.
Ice expands (increases its volume)
as it forms. If one were to measure out
eleven equal parts of water and freeze
it, one would find that it takes up as
much space as twelve parts. When there
is no room for water to expand, pressure becomes strong - water pipes, for
example, will often split open in winter.
Icebergs, being lighter than water,
will float. In the sea about one-eighth
of an iceberg is visible - the rest of it is
hidden below the surface.
What is
ice?
ASBESTOS
ASBESTOS
What is
asbestos?
ASBESTOS is
/-\a mineral that
does not burn! It
is useful around stoves and hot places,
for it will keep things near the stove
from burning.
Asbestos is a light-colored miner~l
that comes from a kind of serpentine. It
is made into asbestos cloth, asbestos
paper and other helpful things. If you
wore a pair of asbestos gloves, you
could touch and handle hot things without getting burned!
45
you
will find it
a rock and
easy to start a
mineral collection?
rock and mineral
collection. Begin
to collect by looking near your home.
If you have a garden, you may find a
rock there. If there is an open field close
by, it should contain some rocks you
will want to have in your collection.
Are workmen building a new house
near your home? They may have dug
up some rocks or minerals you do not
have. Sometimes the builders bring in
new kinds of rocks. Look them over.
How do you begin
46
ou
WILL
need somerocks and minerals? thing to put your
specimens in when
you find them. If you are collecting near
home, a heavy paper bag will do. But ,
put in only a few small rocks at a time.
Most collectors use -a collecting bag
made of strong cloth. It has a strap that
goes over your shoulder to help carry
heavy loads. Surplus goods stores usually have a bag of this kind.
You will often need to break off
rocks and break open new ones. A hammer or even another stone will sometimes help. With a hammer, or a prospector's pick, you can chip off a small
piece of rock from a larger one-.
Rock and mineral collectors like to take home only one or two of each kind
of rock they find. It does not help to
take too many of each. You would soon
run out of room in which to keep them.
need to collect
ou
WILL
want to keep
your best rocks
and minerals. It
will help if you keep each kind together.
The igneous rocks can go into one box.
All of the sedimentary and the metamorphic rocks should be put into other
boxes.
Shoe boxes or wooden cigar boxes
make good containers. A label on the
outside of the box will help you to locate specimens quickly.
Each rock should be labeled separately before you put it into your collection bag. A good system is to put a
47
GRANITE
SEDIMENTARY
ROC~S
CONGLOMERATE
METAMORPHIC
SLATE
SCHIST
SERPENTINE
QUARTZITE
2. GYPSUM
3. CALCITE
4. FLUORITE
7. QUARTZ
8. TOPAZ
9. CORUNDUM
EMERALD
OPAL
RUBY
SULPHUR
RUTILE
6. FELDSPAR
10. DIAMOND
GEM STONES
SAPPHIRE
PEARL
CRYSTALS
AMAZONITE
EPIDOTE
HALITE
DINOSAURS
WEATHER
ELECTRICITY
ROCKS AND MINERALS
ROCKETS AND MISSILES
INSECTS
REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS
BIRDS
OUR EARTH
BEGINNING SCIENCE
MACHINES
THE HUMAN BODY
SEA SHELLS
ATOMIC ENERGY
THE MICROSCOPE
THE CIVIL WAR
MATHEMATICS
BALLET
CHEMISTRY
HORSES
EXPLORATIONS AND
DISCOVERIES
PRIMITIVE MAN
NORTH AMERICA
PLANETS AND
INTERPLANETARY TRAVEL
WILD ANIMALS
SOUND
LOST CITIES
ANTS AND BEES
WILD FLOWERS
DOGS
PREHISTORIC MAMMALS
SCIENCE EXPERIMENTS
5035
5036
5037
5039
5040
5041
5042
5043
5045
5046
5047
5049
5050
5051
5053
5054
5055
5056
5057
5058
5059
5060
5061
5062
5063
5064
5065
5066
5067
5068
5069
WORLD WAR II
FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE
BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS
ROBOTS AND
ELECTRONIC BRAINS
LIGHT AND COLOR
WINNING OF THE WEST
THE AMERICAN
REVOLUTION
CAVES TO SKYSCRAPERS
TIME
MAGNETS AND MAGNETISM
GUNS
FAMOUS SCIENTISTS
OLD TESTAMENT
BUILDING
TREES
OCEANOGRAPHY
NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS
MUSHROOMS, FERNS AND
MOSSES
THE POLAR REGIONS
COINS AND CURRENCY
BASIC INVENTIONS
THE FIRST WORLD WAR
ELECTRONICS
DESERTS
AIR AND WATER
STARS
AIRPLANES AND THE STORY
OF FLIGHT
FISH
BOATS AND SHIPS
THE MOON
TRAINS AND RAILROADS
WONDER BOOKS
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