Earth Science Vocabulary - Identifying Minerals - + Free Worksheet

Thursday, December 18, 2025

 


In this video, we talk about some important Earth Science vocabulary used to identify minerals. 

We start with hardness, which is how easy or hard it is to scratch a mineral. Scientists use the Mohs hardness scale for this, which goes from 1 to 10. Talc is very soft at a 1, while diamond is extremely hard at a 10. If one mineral can scratch another, that means it’s harder.

Next, we look at luster, which is how light reflects off a mineral’s surface. Some minerals look shiny and metallic, while others look dull or glassy. Those are called nonmetallic lusters.

We also explain streak, which is the color of a mineral’s powder when it’s rubbed on a streak plate. This color is often different from the mineral’s outside color and is a better way to help identify it.

Finally, we compare cleavage and fracture. Cleavage means a mineral breaks along smooth, flat surfaces in the same way each time. If a mineral doesn’t do that, it breaks by fracture, creating rough or uneven surfaces. Quartz is a great example of a mineral that breaks by fracture.

Free Worksheet Earth Science Vocabulary ( Mineral Identification)


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