Rocks and Minerals: A Guide to Familiar Minerals, Gems, Ores and Rocks

by Herbert S. Zim, Paul R. Shaffer

Golden Nature Guides (Nature)

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Description

Includes information on collecting and identifying minerals, and sections on metallic, nonmetallic, gem and rock-forming minerals, and on igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rocks.

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12 reviews
Golden Guides is a quaint collection of somewhat useful, pocket-sized field guides for amateurs wishing to delve into a particular field. While the books themselves won’t get you to where you need to be in order to start hitting the fields seriously, they do present a very large coverage over the subject with enough information (some of it potentially outdated!) to point you in the right direction to begin your apprenticeship in the particular field.

In Rocks and Minerals, Herbert S. Zim, the brains behind the series, presents a guide that covers the eponymous subject. It gives the reader enough lingo to be able to understand what mineralogists or geologists are talking about, and enough useful at-home experiments to make rock show more identification simple.

The series, originally published in the 1950s-1970s has recently been revived. While I’m not sure of the quality of the new books (I’m especially curious as to what their stance is on radioactive materials, something Zim et al. freely encouraged the collection of), I certainly hope that it helps today's amateurs and hobbyists hit the ground at the pace as yesterday’s.

The target audience for such a book may be older children to young adult, but adults could enjoy it as well, especially with their adventurous children.
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When I was a boy, we had multiple "Golden Nature Guides", including this guide to minerals, gems, and rocks. As a pocket- sized guide it was ideally suited to the amateur naturalist. Its small color figures were very useful guides to identification.

As compared to our guides to birds and mammals, this guide probably did not get much use in our house. But we would get it out from time to time to identify a rocky treasure brought back from "out west".
One of several pocket-sized Golden Guides that lined my shelves back in the day. Each was interesting, small, easy to carry around in a pocket and thumb through without even being connected to the internet.
With this classic Golden Guide and a rock tumbler, I was a child rock hound.
An identification guide to only the most common knds of rocks and minerals. This guide describes and illustrate their physical and chemical properties, their origin and the geologic structures associated with them, their geologic and economic significance, and where and how to collect them. A handy pocket guide with accurate full-colour illustratins.
One of my all time favorite books as a kid.
One of my childhood books. I carried it around with me on many a day trip and vacation during the 1960s.
½

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183+ Works 27,268 Members
Herbert S. Zim was born in 1909 in New York City. He was a naturalist, author, editor and also known as the fonder and editor in chief of the Golden Guides series of nature books. Zim wrote or edited more than one hundred scientific books, and in a thirty-year career teaching in the public schools introduced laboratory instruction into elementary show more school science. He is best known as the founder in 1945, of the Golden Guides, pocket-size introductions for children to such subjects as fossils, zoology, microscopy, rocks and minerals, codes and secret writings, trees, wildflowers, dinosaurs, navigation and more. He was the sole or co-author for many of the books, which were valued for their clarity, accuracy and attractive presentation helped by the illustrations of James Gordon Irving. He continued to work on the Golden Guides series until Alzheimer's disease forced him to slow down in the 1990s. He died in 1994 at Plantation Key, Florida. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Perlman, Raymond (Illustrator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Rocks and Minerals: A Guide to Familiar Minerals, Gems, Ores and Rocks
Original publication date
1957
First words
Foreword: Nothing is as important in the natural world as our own earth and the rocks beneath our feet.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Most U.S. slate comes from Vermont, Maine, and Pennsylvania.
Disambiguation notice
Originally published as Rocks and Minerals. Under St. Martin's press, the book was revised and updated under the title Rocks, Gems, and Minerals.

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Reference
DDC/MDS
549Natural sciences & mathematicsChemistryMineralogy
LCC
QE365 .Z77ScienceGeologyGeologyMineralogy
BISAC

Statistics

Members
1,777
Popularity
12,321
Reviews
10
Rating
½ (3.65)
Languages
6 — Dutch, English, French, German, Norwegian (Bokmål), Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
12
ASINs
26