Instructions
Look for rocks and minerals with shiny surfaces. Metallic crystals are highly reflective and opaque. Examples of minerals with this metallic luster are gold, pyrite and silver.
Test the hardness of the rock or mineral. Most metallic crystals are very hard. However, some minerals, such as gold and silver, are relatively soft.
Test the response of the rock or mineral to high heat. Most metallic crystals have very high melting and boiling points. There are exceptions, such as mercury, that have lower boiling points.
Evaluate the specimen's conductivity. Metallic crystals conduct heat and electricity.
Investigate the ability of the mineral to be shaped and stretched thin. Metallic crystals are malleable, meaning they can be pounded into thin sheets. They are also ductile. Ductility refers to a metal's ability to be stretched thin into a wire. Gold is the most malleable and ductile of all metals. A single gram of gold can be stretched into a wire 3.2 kilometers long. Gold can be hammered out into a flat sheet only four-millionths of an inch (100 nanometers) thick.
Note the color of the specimen. Different minerals create different colors. Common metallic colors are gold and yellow (gold, pyrite); copper or copper red (copper); bronze (nickel ore); silver, silvery yellow, silvery gray, bright silver, dark silver and black (galena or silver); and peacock feathers and rainbow (bornite and peacock ore).