Testing Rock Hardness

Materials: ★★☆ Available in most school laboratories or specialist stores
Difficulty: ★☆☆ Can be easily done by most teenagers
Safety: ★☆☆ Minimal safety procedures required

Categories: Mining and Resources, Rocks

Alternative titles: Scratch Test: Rock Hardness

Summary

Students perform a scratch test to compare the hardness of different rocks. They discover that harder rocks can scratch softer ones and explore how rock hardness affects their practical uses.

Procedure

  1. Begin by reviewing how rocks can be classified by observable features.
  2. Show two rocks and ask students how they might test which is harder.
  3. Demonstrate a scratch test by rubbing one rock against another; explain that a true scratch leaves a dent, while dust can be wiped away.
  4. Allow students to predict which rocks will be hardest and softest.
  5. Have students test at least two sets of rocks outdoors, recording results on a worksheet.
  6. Guide students in ordering rocks from softest to hardest based on their tests.
  7. Discuss how different rock hardness makes rocks suitable for uses such as carving, grinding, building, or tool-making.

Fun Science Fridays episode 10: rock scratch test - Headwaters Science:


Identifying Minerals - Hardness Test - GeoscienceAustralia:


📄 Scratch test - Primary Connections: https://primaryconnections.org.au/teaching-sequences/year-3/dig-deep/lesson-5-scratch-test

Variations

Safety Precautions

Questions to Consider