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Geoscience

Chemical and physical properties of minerals

Crystallography


Introduction

Up until about the 1950s, most minerals were identified according to their chemical composition (made by wet chemical analysis) and external crystallography (e.g. detailed measurement of crystal faces, lengths of faces, and angles between faces). However, these days we use electron microprobe analysis (based on the property of each element to emit distinctive spectra when bombarded by electrons) and X-ray crystallography (based on the property of each mineral to reflect X-rays at distinct and unique angles specific to that mineral).

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Terms

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The seven crystal systems

The Seven Crystal Systems
The Seven Crystal Systems (Common crystal shapes)
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There are seven main crystal groups or systems:

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Elements of symmetry in crystals

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Twinning in crystals

Occurs when two crystals of the same mineral occur in direct contact with each other along a specified plane or axis. Twins include:

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Structure and chemistry

Polymorphism: minerals with the same chemical composition but different structural state (e.g. silica SiO2 : occurs in a number of different polymorphs with each polymorph being stable under particular conditions of temperature and pressure). Normal quartz is low-T alpha-quartz. Quartz formed in volcanic environments is commonly beta-quartz (very similar structure to alpha-quartz though commonly occurring as equant-shaped crystals), and tridymite or cristobalite (the most common variety of silica in obsidian). Coesite occurs in some very high pressure metamorphic rocks and both coesite and stishovite occur in quartz grains which have been affected by meteorite impact (extreme pressure conditions but relatively low temperature).

Isomorphism: is where minerals of differing chemistry have the same structure (e.g. halite (NaCl) and galena (PbS).)

Pseudomorphism: is where one mineral of a certain crystal system replaces a mineral of another crystal system. The replacement mineral will usually have a different chemical composition (e.g. goethite pseudomorphs after pyrite cubes).

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