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  • I'm a mineralogist.

  • I love minerals, and they're so important in our lives.

  • Virtually all the raw materials we use for technology, for our automobiles, for agriculture, indeed every living thing depends on minerals.

  • But what else?

  • Minerals tell stories because they're incredibly information rich.

  • Every mineral is a time capsule.

  • And they tell us about the four and a half billion year history of our planet.

  • So we wouldn't be here, we wouldn't be able to talk about minerals if it weren't for the minerals themselves.

  • Minerals were fundamental to the origin of life.

  • There were all sorts of key steps, catalysis, reactants, protective surfaces, that you couldn't have made life's chemistry without those special characteristics of minerals.

  • What we've learned, and this is astonishing, is that Earth has gone through these complete changes in character, in color.

  • Earth started off as a black planet covered with basalt.

  • And then the rains came, and the oceans came, and Earth transformed to a blue planet, where it was covered by an ocean.

  • Then we started plate tectonics, a process by which the near surface and the deep interior are churned in a way that creates gray continents of granite.

  • Life evolves to produce an oxygen rich atmosphere that rusts the planet, and you get a red planet now, much like Mars, but that's what our continents would have looked like two billion years ago.

  • Then we went through periods of getting very hot and very cold, and in the coldest stages, we think the entire planet was covered by the white mineral, ice.

  • The ice melted, and the continents became green, because life learned to live on land.

  • And so you now had a green planet, and you also had all kinds of biomineralization.

  • We had shells, and we had teeth, and we had bones that show the struggle for survival in life, but that struggle involved minerals as well.

  • So for that entire four and a half billion history, we've seen the co-evolution of the geosphere and life, the abundant life we see on Earth today.

  • My favorite mineral, I suppose I should say, it's hazelnite, which was named after me, but there's a little bit of a downside here.

  • It's only found in one place in the world.

  • It disappears every time it rains, and it's basically microbial poop.

I'm a mineralogist.

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