Quick Mineral Identification

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  • Опубликовано: 21 фев 2011
  • Quick identifying properties of several minerals.

Комментарии • 670

  • @loststudent1
    @loststudent1 10 лет назад +15

    I thought that your presentation was very helpful. I am an on-line college student in the Atlanta Georgia area who is preparing for my first GEOL mineral lab. I appreciate your video as it gives me a pretty good idea of what to expect when I walk into the room this week. Thank you.

  • @valhu43
    @valhu43 10 лет назад +10

    I love the way you described the garnet as little footballs!

  • @deegraphics2
    @deegraphics2 8 лет назад +7

    This was very useful to show my son during our homeschool Geology lesson today. He's very interested in Geology and can't wait to have a nice collection like yours.Thank you for taking the time to make this video and for sharing it with us :)

  • @normaastx.9359
    @normaastx.9359 7 лет назад +6

    Thank you, for sharing your knowledge with us. From Houston Texas.

  • @farhatjaved3874
    @farhatjaved3874 8 лет назад +2

    Indeed you have done your job. You are one of the best instructors I have ever come across.

    • @clairebeane3455
      @clairebeane3455 5 лет назад

      Farhat Javed Agreed!! Thanks for the tutorial!!

  • @stinkycatz
    @stinkycatz 8 лет назад +3

    What a nice collection of minerals you have .

  • @eorm4776
    @eorm4776 3 года назад +2

    Excellent video for providing a brief overview of common minerals. It was a great aid for our kid's home school science lesson.

  • @Cenepk101
    @Cenepk101 5 лет назад +7

    Thank you for this video- I just ID ed the 2 stones I found in my yard. They are copper !!!! So pretty!!! I live about 10 miles as the crow flies from Stone Mountain Ga. Always finding beautiful stones. Lots of quartz

  • @stephenshaleigh6936
    @stephenshaleigh6936 10 лет назад +9

    Very nice guide, thanks!!!
    I have a collection arranged in Multi Collector that i am trying to identify now.

  • @michealwintz852
    @michealwintz852 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for your video. I'm not a school room student but, I'm a prospecter of Hematite for jewelry. I'm suddenly acquiring many rocks that I can't identify including fossils. So these identification videos are great learning tools. Thank you again for a great informative video. 💗 Ms Michal

    • @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks
      @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks Год назад +1

      Your comment made me curious if you had any good rock hounding, lapidary or other useful videos in your playlists. So I clicked on your thumbnail and and looked for myself. I've created my own playlist of your public playlists, I'll remove the black/white movies later, lol, since that's not my cup of tea. So thanks for your variety of rock hounding, lapidary and OTHER videos for me to explore. Great taste!

  • @STONES624
    @STONES624 4 года назад

    Fantastic these beautiful gems come to leave my LIKE

  • @netyote
    @netyote 12 лет назад +2

    Thank you for this video. It helped me review for my geology mineral identification test. I liked how you just did brief descriptions of some of the most easily identifiable characteristics of each.

  • @trevorzzealley2670
    @trevorzzealley2670 8 лет назад +1

    Thankyou for making & sharing this video . I learned from it , please keep them coming .

  • @shunriely2922
    @shunriely2922 10 лет назад +1

    Also beautiful collection,,,

  • @equanimity160395
    @equanimity160395 9 лет назад +3

    Very informative and helps me a lot. Thanks!!

  • @bouzadachannel5320
    @bouzadachannel5320 10 лет назад +1

    Nice collection !

  • @andrewcadigan1357
    @andrewcadigan1357 11 лет назад

    Thanks for the video you have helped me identify some of the minerals I have found here in New Mexico by Socorro thanks so much!!

  • @C4FishingTeam
    @C4FishingTeam 12 лет назад +39

    Finally a scientifically literate video!!!!! I was getting tired of those "secret energy" crystal videos from mount juju...

  • @TreeLynnT
    @TreeLynnT 4 года назад

    Very helpful! I now know I found some pretty awesome stuff.

  • @SamirKhan-mz8ii
    @SamirKhan-mz8ii 4 года назад

    The best ever video I had ever watched so clearly about minerals..... Thank u....🙏

  • @crazysam871
    @crazysam871 10 лет назад +1

    I really like your video. I've had a geology class last session(in Québec) and saw some mineral and I wanted to get a list of the most commons and their English names and you gave me a nice video perfect for what I was looking for! Ty

  • @grapeagatestone6854
    @grapeagatestone6854 3 года назад

    Wow....amazing

  • @Caver461
    @Caver461 9 лет назад +7

    Native copper - reminds me of the natural silver wire found in Cobalt

  • @deaconsmom2000
    @deaconsmom2000 11 лет назад +2

    I would LOVE this class! Your teaching method is probably very effective; the associations, etc already took root in my mind after 8 minutes. Thanks :D

  • @williamwu1679
    @williamwu1679 6 лет назад

    hey guys,i'm gemstones seller,it's my pleasure to see you guys here.thanks for your posting.

  • @Omkara.404
    @Omkara.404 5 лет назад

    Good collection sir.

  • @canadiangemstones7636
    @canadiangemstones7636 3 года назад +32

    A few corrections: 1) Your apatite is actually grossular from Lake Jaco, Mexico. 2) Bauxite is a rock, not a mineral. 3) Cinnabar is mercury sulfide, not oxide. 4) The second copper is natural, not a smelter product, from Michigan. 5) Your hematite ring is most likely a manmade material. 6) Malachite is copper carbonate, not oxide. 7) Quartz is not glass. 8) Your smoky quartz crystal is an irradiated crystal of formerly colourless quartz, from Arkansas.

    • @abcdude8784
      @abcdude8784 2 года назад

      yep i agree ^^ nice one

    • @chloehopewell1225
      @chloehopewell1225 2 года назад +2

      Glass and quartz are both SiO2, but glass doesn’t form the same hexagonal crystal structure because it cools much faster. Glass typically has other things added to it (such as potassium) to lower its melting point. So in a sense, quartz is glass, because they have the same chemical makeup.

    • @upendrablissfulkumar6465
      @upendrablissfulkumar6465 Год назад

      Vow

    • @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks
      @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks Год назад +1

      Incredible Presentation!
      Is this really HS Geology in British Columbia, Canada?
      WOW American schools are so far behind! Even if there are some inaccuracies, it's still better than most things I have seen online.

    • @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks
      @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks Год назад +2

      2:58 Cinnabar ... Mercury toxic? 4:02 Who looks at horse meat? 4:06 Fluorite and 5:34 Malachite, Formation shape are helpful here!

  • @davidolaniran4275
    @davidolaniran4275 3 года назад

    I enjoy watching it.

  • @blunosr
    @blunosr  12 лет назад +1

    Hi, I travel across Canada a couple of times a year, and I like stopping at mine sites, and dimensional stone (tomb stones, counter tops) places. They usually let me look around their scrap piles. I also purchased some at science shops, rock shops, scientific supply places.

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 10 лет назад

    Well, thank you for the help. They are neat little rocks.

  • @davidkovach5866
    @davidkovach5866 11 лет назад

    nice video,glad to see someone doing some explaining

  • @nickibulicek2998
    @nickibulicek2998 5 лет назад +6

    That’s one of my favorite rocks I love gemstone

  • @brento2890
    @brento2890 7 лет назад +2

    Califonia, USA. Your video has made it around the WORLD!

  • @trevorgwelch7412
    @trevorgwelch7412 3 года назад +1

    These minerals are the reason why aliens visit our planet , to rob us of our minerals .

  • @theloserron
    @theloserron 8 лет назад

    thank you for the educational video , it gave me the confirmation i was looking for

  • @mremberton7919
    @mremberton7919 6 лет назад

    Amp up its like a teacher style thank you for your knowledge

  • @designcraft3512
    @designcraft3512 7 лет назад

    Really useful video.

  • @karenbradyptl
    @karenbradyptl 10 лет назад +1

    Excellent most informative. Best on the net!

  • @WaterntheDesert
    @WaterntheDesert 11 лет назад +1

    That was a very good lesson , thank you

  • @pullingthestrings5233
    @pullingthestrings5233 3 года назад +1

    Yay I recognized most of them from my geology class. I also mentioned that k-feldspar looks like meat with the striations of potassium running thru it. Nice job.

    • @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks
      @Gems-of-Hope-Rocks Год назад +1

      Actually, he said k-spar looked like horse meat. I actually was taken aback by that because we do not eat horse meat in the United States. Is it/Was it common in Canada?

  • @missanna208802
    @missanna208802 11 лет назад +1

    You're so awesome for getting back to me. It's clear that you know waaaay more than I do about this kind of thing, and maybe it is ok to say that glass is quartz, but quartz is not glass (super simplified). I'm afraid you will have to dumb down your explanation to me because I am not well educated in this subject. Thanks for this video. I'm trying to decide whether I want to get into the rock side of jewelry. I've had some metals classes at univeristy, but I like rocks too.

  • @grantryan9591
    @grantryan9591 7 лет назад

    100% clear information.thanks

  • @trippingonrocks1165
    @trippingonrocks1165 4 года назад

    I'll be watching this a few times, thank you for explaining these so clearly.

    • @trippingonrocks1165
      @trippingonrocks1165 4 года назад

      @@op5814 bro you have no idea what I did or didn't learn from this video. I leave a positive comment and you want to trash it for no apparent reason says alot about you though...

  • @Kriswixx
    @Kriswixx 11 лет назад

    Thank you so much! I got a storage unit with many of these, some polished rocks, jewelry making. I want to ebay them but don't know the names of all of them.. This is helping out!! wish you could look at my photos and tell me :)

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 10 лет назад +2

    Walking through the woods (in New York), I came across a large amount of very, very shiny, glasslike rocks. I picked one up, and hit it with another rock and it fractured very easily into a little shard. They are all deep black, and working with them leaves a black residue. I took some of it home with me. Any idea what it could be?

  • @blunosr
    @blunosr  11 лет назад +8

    Well, there's only so much you can say in an 8 minute video. Maybe one day I'll do a separate video for each mineral. There's a lot to know about each mineral. Someone else asked about uses of each mineral, and yes, most of these do have uses in industry, but again that would be a very long video.

    • @troypellerin9070
      @troypellerin9070 3 года назад

      Can i email you pic to help me identify

    • @kristinroney7591
      @kristinroney7591 3 года назад

      Please do more videos. On the minerals. I want to study minerals and rocks and prospect for gold on my free time . Its intruiging. I love it. Please ....make more

  • @BoxKingKevin
    @BoxKingKevin 6 лет назад

    You're my new favourite teacher lol

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 10 лет назад

    Can Gabbro be really glossy? I just took out a chunk of these rocks and cleaned it with water and an old tooth brush. In the process, I noticed that not all of the rocks have a black residue, and the ones that do have a very small, but visible grain. So do you think those would be gabbro? There are a few that have no grain to the naked eye, and they are really shiny and glossy. I'm thinking about trying to grind it into a marble or something, they look awesome.

  • @gal304
    @gal304 9 лет назад +4

    You're great! thanks!

  • @blunosr
    @blunosr  11 лет назад +1

    Further processing is usually required to get metals out of their ore minerals. Commonly reduction reactions are used for that.

  • @AnxiousKoala
    @AnxiousKoala 7 лет назад

    I would take this class for fun! Thanks for the video and wish I could take the class. :)

  • @12oc6h
    @12oc6h 12 лет назад +1

    thank you so much,this is what was looking for.

  • @marylben6356
    @marylben6356 6 лет назад

    This is really good.

  • @StevenSchoolAlchemy
    @StevenSchoolAlchemy 5 лет назад

    I like those minerals! sharing video to basic crystal growing on facebook.

  • @delsakelly1456
    @delsakelly1456 5 лет назад

    I'm impressed !

  • @trippingonrocks1165
    @trippingonrocks1165 4 года назад

    I know what horse. Meat. Looks like now haha.. Interesting display and discriptions of each. Nice video, thank you

  • @passmethewrench
    @passmethewrench 10 лет назад +1

    Cool. Thx. Very interesting.

  • @Persac7
    @Persac7 4 года назад

    Nice minerals!

  • @user-cc2st8rb8x
    @user-cc2st8rb8x 3 года назад

    Extraordinaire👍👍👍

  • @anthonydiaz9927
    @anthonydiaz9927 10 лет назад +5

    I am new to all this, but have a growing interest in mineral identification and found your video very interesting. I live on a tropical island and would like to know what types of minerals can be found on tropical islands.

    • @blunosr
      @blunosr  10 лет назад +3

      Hi, If you're on a coral atoll, there might be no minerals other than shells and coral. The rocks made entirely of shells are called coquina. Volcanic islands might have zeolites, which come in many varieties, and contain rare earth elements. Maybe olivine, which in large clear crystals is commonly known as peridote.

    • @starinthesky1520
      @starinthesky1520 7 лет назад

      Hi, I have a big piece let say of rock/glass, heavy, color green emerald like with one rough white side, not sharp at all, it has many uneven cuts. It look like Tzavorite Garnet or Emerald, I bought it from an estate auction as a gemstone with other stones and I really want to know what it is exactly. Thanks for your help

    • @SoulDevoured
      @SoulDevoured 7 лет назад

      Hi star, there are message boards and forums (I believe there is also a sub-forum on reddit) where you can share pictures and give exacting description to find the the most accurate identification. It is more difficult to identify when not in person but there is specific criteria for identification of any stone. Check out a gemstone or mineral forum and they can help guide you.

    • @starinthesky1520
      @starinthesky1520 7 лет назад +2

      Thanks SoulDevoured, I will try that

    • @SoulDevoured
      @SoulDevoured 7 лет назад +3

      Not a problem. The internet is a treasure trove of information but, just like when finding gemstones, it helps to know where to dig XD Let me know how it goes.

  • @TreeLynnT
    @TreeLynnT 4 года назад +1

    Wow. I have a lot of these from Lake Michigan area ❤

    • @roughdiamond4537
      @roughdiamond4537 4 года назад

      We sell Rough Diamond USD 400 per carat VVS D-color, we are currently in Namibia, southern Africa. Do you perhaps have a network of potential buyers you can refer us too. mopmining@gmail.com

  • @tedoymisojos
    @tedoymisojos 12 лет назад

    wow they are beautiful

  • @ArtisanSoapmaking
    @ArtisanSoapmaking 12 лет назад

    thank-you for sharing very interesting :)

  • @finpainter1
    @finpainter1 8 лет назад +2

    the copper samples were both from under ground mines or ore piles. not from a smelter. copper in upper peninsula of michigan is almost pure form.some pieces can go many tons.

  • @jameslum19981902
    @jameslum19981902 12 лет назад

    Well , This video is awesome !! it is fast-going , doesnt bore someone to hell . but , just 2 things, , Cinnabar is mercury sulfide , and malachite is copper carbonate =D Anyways , great vid and keep up the good work !

  • @07Hawkeye
    @07Hawkeye 11 лет назад

    can quarts be dark black and grow inside (on the side of) a clear shiny possible quarts rock? it isnt crystal shaped in anyway its either a chunk of a really large quarts crystal or a completely different mineral all together. the black crystal is fairly soft and can fragment if hit hard enough with a rock hammer, only small pieces but the clear rock crystal thing doesnt fragment, crack, even stress the slightest bit no matter how hard i tried to chip it with a chisel and rock hammer.. help?

  • @astroak89
    @astroak89 12 лет назад

    nice ..........and good .

  • @daianmata5945
    @daianmata5945 3 года назад

    Nice ! Thank you !

  • @freddymello3227
    @freddymello3227 4 года назад +2

    How do I identify a rough diamond from other types of quarts crystals?

  • @mkt1grand399
    @mkt1grand399 6 лет назад

    so nice ............

  • @timbagzey1465
    @timbagzey1465 9 лет назад +10

    thanks to this video i have just found out ive got asbestos in my rock collection , ive now put it in a airtight bag.

  • @shwnshts9469
    @shwnshts9469 5 лет назад +17

    "It looks like horse meat"!? Dang, we really gotta start paying these teachers more...

  • @instagem2693
    @instagem2693 2 года назад

    Very informative :)

  • @frankreiserm.s.8039
    @frankreiserm.s.8039 6 лет назад

    The basic building-block molecule of quartz is silicon dioxide, SiO2. However, when the SiO2 molecules are attached together to form the quartz mineral, it is in the form of SiO4.

  • @CaveManFishMedia
    @CaveManFishMedia 10 лет назад

    I found a rock whilst on the beach and I noticed it was shining. So I picked it up and there was a little hole and inside I could see some light orange shining crystal formations. On the outside the rock is mottled grey and quite smooth. Could you tell me what it is?

  • @lauriebriscoe6983
    @lauriebriscoe6983 2 года назад

    Thanks very helpful

  • @DrawingTechnical
    @DrawingTechnical 4 года назад

    Very cool. I really like the green and blue coloured rocks, imagine building a house with them! I wish the camera focused a bit better though, it did the video injustice.

  • @jamesanagnos6123
    @jamesanagnos6123 5 лет назад

    the Boxite i have seen is not spoted like that but deep brick red in color in verious shades but alway solid color never spoted , where is this boxite from ?

  • @wendys390
    @wendys390 7 лет назад

    Thank you! very infomative

  • @DeliciousDeBlair
    @DeliciousDeBlair 5 лет назад

    I hope to find some of those minerals on my land, especially galena and sphalerite! Possibly some malachite and a few minerals you did not list.

  • @reginahanson2186
    @reginahanson2186 4 года назад

    Thanks for this video. ♡

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal 10 лет назад

    Okay, I tried to hardness test the rock. It can't scratch glass, my finger nail can't scratch it, but a 2007 penny can scratch it. So that would mean its hardness is between 2.5-3, right? Does this help narrow down what rock/mineral it could be? Very shiny, no apparent cleavage or foliation, dark black color, very shiny/glasslike, hardness

  • @Ryuuken24
    @Ryuuken24 12 лет назад

    I've only found 3 of these minerals out in the wild. Identifying them is awesome, but knowing how to find them, instead of cheating in your way into places selling them!

  • @yukimisaki2592
    @yukimisaki2592 4 года назад +1

    I'm super late but what stone is it at minute 4:20? The one that has garnet in it

  • @seraphimwarrior777
    @seraphimwarrior777 11 лет назад

    those are some cool lookin rocks

  • @jimjaeger8968
    @jimjaeger8968 3 года назад +1

    Very informative. I found myself wishing the words were there too so I could see the spelling and hear the pronounciation.

  • @osamashaikh8551
    @osamashaikh8551 3 года назад

    Amazing

  • @Aleksandra-lf8ky
    @Aleksandra-lf8ky Год назад

    super kolekcja co prawda chaotycznie poukładana

  • @coherantbliss3483
    @coherantbliss3483 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks for your vid. I have a question and don't know if you can answer it. Of which mineral/stone family gives off the most spark/energy when striking each other? And which one mostly absorbs energy? If you don't know what would be your guess? I have seen a video that if a certain stone is used with copper it can create energy.

    • @SoulDevoured
      @SoulDevoured 7 лет назад +1

      I'm not entirely sure I understand all your questions but I do know that flint stone and steel (or any iron based metal/mineral) is what is used to make sparks and ignite fire. As far as stones that absorb energy, nonmetallic ceramic like stones, like talc in this video, are probably the best bet there. I believe asbestos is also very insulating but I wouldn't recommend it for any science experiment you're gonna try at home.
      Or if you mean absorb energy as in carry/conduct it, any common metal mineral will work. With zinc, gold, and copper being among the top.
      Sorry I can't help much more. I suggest searching google for "the least conductive minerals" or "conductive properties of common minerals" for a better shot at finding the MOST conductive and insulating minerals.

    • @coherantbliss3483
      @coherantbliss3483 7 лет назад +1

      Thank you very much for your answers. I did mean carry/hold energy but of course with the appropriate one-way shielding

  • @blunosr
    @blunosr  12 лет назад

    Yes, this is just out for this video. It is kept in a sealed container normally. When not abraided or played with, the fibres usually remain intact and don't enter the air.

  • @shunriely2922
    @shunriely2922 10 лет назад +2

    Was listen ,,but did see no meteorite ,do you have any ,if so please video it ,,,I love the way you teach a person is sure to learn,,,good job thanks for sharin ,,,

  • @josephbanda2269
    @josephbanda2269 6 лет назад

    nice several minerals

  • @D3adP00I
    @D3adP00I 4 года назад

    I got them, now just need to identify them ;) thanks

  • @rogeralanrodriguezortiz4554
    @rogeralanrodriguezortiz4554 6 лет назад +1

    Just remember people touching an unknown rock or rare metals could be deadly... Take precautions when MINING or using chemicals... Always use safety equipment first... Breathing in hard concentrations of metals in a rock alloys... Rocks with toxins could be deadly and unhealthy for you... Please take precautions while exploring precious metals and mostly rare metals and rare unknown rocks... Still new rocks with no name could appear and might be deadly or not... But new identifications or using GEOLOGY books rocks identifyers comes in handy... When searching for what you want in MINING precious metals...

  • @user-zj6hi4oo8p
    @user-zj6hi4oo8p 6 лет назад

    Very Nice

  • @jackstar3136
    @jackstar3136 8 лет назад +1

    Thx for the fact of rocks!

  • @BacGold
    @BacGold 2 года назад +1

    Gostei muito dó seu canal é sou garimpeiro 🙏

  • @seditt5146
    @seditt5146 2 года назад

    God I need more videos EXACTLY like this one. Any recommendations ?

  • @blunosr
    @blunosr  12 лет назад +1

    @KurtCaro13 Hi, I do have a video about easily confused minerals. I think that's what I called it too, "Easily Confused Minerals".

  • @therrienmichael08
    @therrienmichael08 10 лет назад

    I like being able to identify rock and minerals.