What are the uses of rocks?



Rocket and minerals make up much of our planet. They are formed deep inside the Earth over millions of Years. Rocks exist in lots of different shape, textures, and colours. They are mined to provide any of the things around us. Can you guess which rock is used where?



Granite:



Granite is and igneous rock which has extremely good weathering properties because it is very hard. This hardness makes it relatively difficult to work. Granite has been used in a large number of important buildings in the UK including Truro Cathedral, London Tower Bridge, Parts of St Pauls Cathedral, and Nelson’s Column. Granite has been mostly mined in the South West of England (Devon and Cornwall and in Aberdeenshire. Aberdeen is called the Granite City.



Iron ore:



Earth's most important iron ore deposits are found in sedimentary rocks. They formed from chemical reactions that combined iron and oxygen in marine and fresh waters. The two most important minerals in these deposits are iron oxides: hematite (Fe2O3) and magnetite (Fe3O4). These iron ores have been mined to produce almost every iron and steel object that we use today - from paper clips to automobiles to the steel beams in skyscrapers.



Turquoise:



Turquoise is an opaque mineral that occurs in beautiful hues of blue, bluish green, green, and yellowish green. It has been treasured as a gemstone for thousands of years. Isolated from one another, the ancient people of Africa, Asia, South America and North America independently made turquoise one of their preferred materials for producing gemstones, inlay, and small sculptures.



 Rock salt:



Rock Salt is a chemical sedimentary rock that forms from the evaporation of ocean or saline lake waters. It is also known by the mineral name "halite". It is rarely found at Earth's surface, except in areas of very arid climate. It is often mined for use in the chemical industry or for use as a winter highway treatment. Some halite is processed for use as a seasoning for food. 



Marble:



Marble is a metamorphic rock that forms when limestone is subjected to the heat and pressure of metamorphism. It is composed primarily of the mineral calcite (CaCO3) and usually contains other minerals, such as clay minerals, micas, quartz, pyrite, iron oxides, and graphite. Under the conditions of metamorphism, the calcite in the limestone recrystallizes to form a rock that is a mass of interlocking calcite crystals. A related rock, dolomitic marble, is produced when dolostone is subjected to heat and pressure.



 



Picture Credit : Google


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