Peterson First Guide to Rocks and Minerals
Affiliate disclosure: purchases made through links on this site may earn us a commission at no additional cost to you.
Best for readers who...
Good fit if you want...
- Strong option when you want a title that settles into its lane quickly.
- Worth opening if you want a more concrete fit signal than lookalikes.
- If you want thoughtful reflections, the choices here have no easy moral answers.
Maybe skip if...
- Best to skip if you need only very short reading sessions right now.
- Probably not for you if you want zero ambiguity before first click.
- You need the newest edition, freshest examples, or the most current framing.
Summary
This edition suggests Peterson First Guide to Rocks and Minerals by Frederick H. Pough is a practical or reference-style book built for dipping in and out. This edition lists 1998 • Houghton Mifflin • 128 pages, which gives you a quick sense of scope and pace.
Edition on file: 1998 • Houghton Mifflin • 128 pages • ISBN 9780395935439.
Why this book now
A reasonable choice if you like backlist books that still feel specific and usable.
Reader guide
Quick signals that help you decide faster.
Reading commitment
Quick Easy to move through
Reference-style commitment. Easier to sample in pieces than to read straight through once.
What stands out here
What stands out here is the tool-like value. This looks built for return visits, quick checks, and practical use instead of one linear read.
Best way to approach it
Best approached in short bursts. Open where you need help and move around freely.
30-second preview
Two quick cards, fifteen seconds each.
Card 1 of 2
Was this page helpful?
Quick thumbs only. No login.
Loading feedback…
Similar books on UPB
Nearby picks ranked by author, shelf fit, publisher, era, and record quality.
Recommendation cards are not ready for this book yet.
Preview links
Optional external previews if you still want to check before buying.
Expect something you can open anywhere, scan fast, and return to when you need a specific answer. That usually makes for a compact read that should get to its point quickly. It also has the feel of a backlist title rather than a brand-new release.
Book overview built from edition details and related-book context.