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Published byLizette Rossell Modified over 9 years ago
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Silicon Tetrahedra by Charina Cameron 4 oxygen atoms 1 silicon atom in the center Forms a 4-sided geometry Each side is like an equilateral triangle Creates a 4- ion
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Some Silicate structures Single tetrahedrons, single chains, double chains, sheets, rings, and 3-D networks
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SINGLE SILICATE TETRAHEDRA Garnet (red) Olivine (green) (Fe,Mg)SiO 4 crystal
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SINGLE CHAIN SILICATES Pyroxene Group [Fe,Mg,Ca,Al silicates]: –Augite (note the near 90 o angle of the two cleavages)
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DOUBLE CHAIN SILICATES Amphibole Group [Na,Ca,Fe,Mg,Al silicates w/ H 2 O]: –The mineral hornblende is common –Nnote the 156 degree angle of the two cleavages
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SHEET SILICATES Muscovite mica [K,Al + H 2 O] Biotite mica [K,Mg,Fe,Al + H 2 O] –Note the single perfect cleavage and elastic sheets TalcKaolinite (clay) [K,Al + H 2 O]
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ZEOLITE RING SILICATES Naturalite from North Mountain Basalt Formation
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FRAMEWORK SILICATES Feldspar group: –Most abundant mineral group –Orthoclase (K-feldspar) –Albite (Na-Plagioclase) –Labradorite (Ca-rich Plagioclase) 2 cleavages note twinning lines
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FRAMEWORK SILICATES Quartz (SiO 2 ), the most common mineral: Chalcedony (SiO 2 ): –microcrystalline quartz –many var. (chert, jasper, flint) amethyst quartz crystal milky quartz rose quartz
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FRAMEWORK SILICATES Hexagonal quartz crystal
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FRAMEWORK SILICATES Amethyst (quartz) geode from the Scots Bay Formation
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FRAMEWORK SILICATES Amethyst (quartz) geode replacing small straight tree trunk surrounded by chert ( from Scots Bay Fm)
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