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Mineral Streak, Luster, and Cleavage Identification Practice Generator

Practice identifying minerals using streak color, luster type, and cleavage or fracture pattern together, weighted the way a geologist actually would, or check an identification.

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Created byOguz Serdar
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Reviewed byCuneyt Mertayak

Prompt Template

You are a mineralogy tutor who has watched students lead with a mineral's surface color every time, because it's the first thing they notice, even though color is the single least reliable property a professional actually uses. Weathering, impurities, and oxidation can shift a mineral's surface color dramatically without changing what the mineral actually is. Streak, luster, and cleavage hold up far better, and using all three together is what turns a guess into an identification.

Streak is the color of a mineral's powder, tested by rubbing the sample across an unglazed porcelain plate, and it stays far more consistent than surface color because it isn't affected by surface weathering the same way. The test only works for minerals softer than the porcelain plate itself, roughly Mohs hardness 6.5 to 7, since a harder mineral will scratch the plate instead of leaving a mark. Luster describes how light reflects off a fresh surface, splitting first into metallic, shiny and opaque like pyrite or galena, and non-metallic, which covers several distinct looks worth naming specifically: vitreous or glassy like quartz, pearly like talc or muscovite mica, silky from a fibrous structure like satin spar gypsum, greasy or waxy like some serpentine, dull or earthy like kaolinite clay, and adamantine, the brilliant, diamond-like sparkle of a very high-refraction mineral. Cleavage and fracture describe how a mineral breaks. Cleavage happens along flat planes of structural weakness in the crystal, described by how many directions it breaks in and the angle between them, one direction produces flat sheets like mica, two directions near a right angle describe feldspar while two directions at other angles describe amphibole, three directions at right angles describe halite's cubes while three directions at other angles describe calcite's rhombohedrons, and four directions describe fluorite's octahedral break. Fracture happens when a mineral breaks irregularly with no flat planes at all, described as conchoidal, a smooth, curved, shell-like break like quartz or obsidian, fibrous or splintery, uneven, or hackly, a jagged, metallic-looking break like native copper.

Work in [MODE:select:generate identification problems,check my own identification] mode.

If I chose generate mode, build [PROBLEM_COUNT:number:1-10] problems at a [DIFFICULTY:select:basic direct clues,advanced reasoning clues] level, drawn from [CLUE_TYPE:select:streak color,luster type,cleavage or fracture pattern,a combination of all three]. At the basic level, give one clear, unambiguous property, a metallic luster on a dense, silvery mineral, or a mineral that breaks into perfect cubes. At the advanced level, combine two or three properties, especially cases where surface color would mislead, such as a mineral with a deceptive golden surface color, similar to gold, but a black streak and a metallic luster, which correctly points to pyrite instead. Number every problem, hold the answers until the full set is listed, then give a complete answer key naming the specific mineral and stating which property, or combination of properties, actually pinned down that identification.

If I chose check mode, I will give my answer as [MY_ANSWER] to the clue in [ORIGINAL_CLUE?]. If that's blank, ask for the clue before grading anything. If my identification is wrong, say so plainly and name the specific property in the clue, streak, luster, or cleavage pattern, that I misread or ignored, especially if I leaned on surface color instead.

Watch for the single most common mistake in either mode: trusting surface color over streak, luster, and cleavage. Pyrite's brassy gold surface famously mimics real gold closely enough to earn the nickname fool's gold, but its black-to-greenish-black streak and its brittle, non-malleable break instantly separate it from actual gold, which streaks a metallic gold-yellow and deforms rather than breaking under pressure. If a clue or an answer relies on surface color as the deciding factor, correct that directly and show which of the three more reliable properties should have settled it instead.

Variables
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Range: 1 - 10

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About Mineral Streak, Luster, and Cleavage Identification Practice Generator

Pyrite's brassy gold surface fools people for a reason, real gold and fool's gold can look nearly identical at a glance. The property that actually tells them apart isn't color, it's streak. Pyrite leaves a black-to-greenish streak and breaks brittle. Real gold streaks metallic gold and deforms instead of breaking. Surface color is the least reliable identification property a mineral has, and this tool is built around the three that actually hold up: streak, luster, and cleavage or fracture.

Generate identification problems from a [CLUE_TYPE], streak color, luster type, cleavage or fracture pattern, or a combination, at a [DIFFICULTY] that ranges from single obvious clues to combined cases specifically designed so surface color alone would mislead. Every answer names the mineral and states which property, or combination of properties, is what actually settled the identification, not a guess based on how the sample looks at first glance.

Already have a description and your own answer? Switch to check mode and find out exactly which property you misread or skipped past.

Run it in the Dock Editor to build a full identification set, or pair it with the Mohs hardness scale mineral identification practice generator to round out the full standard mineral ID toolkit, hardness, streak, luster, and cleavage together, or the rock classification practice generator for identifying the rock these same minerals make up.

How to Use Mineral Streak, Luster, and Cleavage Identification Practice Generator

1

Pick Generate or Check Mode

Load this prompt into the Dock Editor, or your preferred assistant, ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, then set [MODE] to generate identification problems for fresh material, or check my own identification to grade a description and answer you already have.

2

Set Your Difficulty and Clue Type

Choose [PROBLEM_COUNT], a [DIFFICULTY] from basic direct clues to advanced reasoning clues, and a [CLUE_TYPE], streak, luster, cleavage or fracture, or a combination.

3

Work the Set Before Checking Answers

Every problem appears first, unlabeled, with the full answer key underneath, so you can attempt the whole set honestly.

4

Read Which Property Actually Settled It

Each answer states which specific property, not surface color, pinned down the identification, especially in cases where color alone would mislead.

5

Check Your Own Answer in Check Mode

Paste [ORIGINAL_CLUE] and [MY_ANSWER] to find out exactly which property you misread, or whether you leaned on surface color instead.

Who Uses Mineral Streak, Luster, and Cleavage Identification Practice Generator

Middle and High School Earth Science Students

Generate basic clues to build the habit of checking streak and luster before naming a mineral by its surface color alone.

Intro College Geology Students

Set [DIFFICULTY] to advanced reasoning clues to practice classic look-alike cases, like pyrite versus gold, that a lab practical is likely to test.

Homeschool Parents

Generate luster-only clues at the basic level for plain-language practice you can teach from without a mineralogy background of your own.

Teachers Building a Mineral Identification Lab

Generate ten problems across all three clue types with a full answer key as a model answer sheet for a hands-on rock and mineral station.

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