CORE CONCEPT
Minerals are naturally occurring, inorganic solids with a fixed chemical composition and an orderly crystal structure. In geography exams, we study minerals as valuable natural resources found in Earth's crust. India has significant mineral wealth distributed across different regions.
Understanding minerals means knowing what they are, where they are found, and how they are used.
KEY PROPERTIES OF MINERALS
1. Natural occurrence โ formed by natural processes, not manufactured
2. Inorganic โ made of non-living matter
3.
Definite composition โ specific chemical formula (e.g., iron oxide for iron ore)
4. Crystalline structure โ atoms arranged in a regular, repeating pattern
5. Solid state โ exists as solid under normal conditions
6.
Extractable โ can be mined and used economically
CLASSIFICATION OF MINERALS IN INDIA
Metallic minerals: Iron ore, copper, bauxite, manganese, nickel, chromite โ found in Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand
Non-metallic minerals: Limestone, gypsum, mica, asbestos, diamond โ found in various states
Energy minerals: Coal and petroleum โ major energy sources
EXAM PATTERNS
SSC CGL questions typically ask:
โข Major mineral producing states in India
โข Uses of specific minerals
โข Which mineral is found in which state (matching type)
โข Percentage of India's mineral reserves globally
โข Properties that define a mineral
SHORTCUT/TRICK
Remember "IONIC" for mineral properties: Inorganic, Natural occurrence, Ions/crystal structure, Orderly arrangement, Composition (fixed), Extractable. Use this acronym to quickly verify if something is a mineral.
WORKED EXAMPLE
Question: Identify which state produces maximum iron ore in India and name its major iron ore deposits.
Step 1: Recall top iron ore producing states โ Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand
Step 2: Odisha is #1 producer (supplies ~50% of India's iron ore)
Step 3: Major deposits in Odisha โ Keonjhar district and Sundargarh district
Step 4: Famous mines โ Joda, Barbil, Tomka
Answer: Odisha produces maximum iron ore; major deposits in Keonjhar and Sundargarh districts.
COMMON MISTAKE
Students confuse 'ore' with 'mineral.' A mineral is a pure chemical compound found in nature. An ore is a mineral or rock that contains enough metal to be mined profitably.
Not all minerals are ores, but all ores contain minerals. For example, hematite (Fe2O3) is a mineral; when found in concentrations worth mining, it becomes iron ore.