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  2. Cleavage (crystal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleavage_(crystal)

    The classic example of cleavage is mica, which cleaves in a single direction along the basal pinacoid, making the layers seem like pages in a book. In fact, mineralogists often refer to "books of mica". Diamond and graphite provide examples of cleavage. Each is composed solely of a single element, carbon.

  3. Portal:Minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Minerals

    These flat breaks are termed "cleavage". The classic example of cleavage is mica, which cleaves in a single direction along the basal pinacoid, making the layers seem like pages in a book. In fact, mineralogists often refer to "books of mica". Diamond and graphite provide examples of cleavage.

  4. Cyrilovite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyrilovite

    The individual crystals are usually smaller than 0.1 mm and many of them are intergrown. Crystals are squat and when single tend to lie on the basal pinacoid. The pinacoid {001} and the dipyramid {113} are the dominant forms; all the faces of these forms tend to be present and equally well developed. The dipyramid {012} is not always present.

  5. Gmelinite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gmelinite

    Hexagonal plates, or short prisms, showing hexagonal dipyramids, pyramids and basal pinacoid. {10 1 0}, {10 1 1} and {0001} dominant. May also be tabular or rhombohedral. Crystals are striated parallel to (0001) Twinning: Interpenetrant twins common [3] on {10 1 1}.

  6. Biotite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biotite

    Like other mica minerals, biotite has a highly perfect basal cleavage, and consists of flexible sheets, or lamellae, which easily flake off. It has a monoclinic crystal system, with tabular to prismatic crystals with an obvious pinacoid termination. It has four prism faces and two pinacoid faces to form a pseudohexagonal crystal. Although not ...

  7. Hexagonal crystal family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexagonal_crystal_family

    In the hexagonal family, the crystal is conventionally described by a right rhombic prism unit cell with two equal axes (a by a), an included angle of 120° (γ) and a height (c, which can be different from a) perpendicular to the two base axes.

  8. Sabelliite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabelliite

    Sabelliite is a transparent emerald green crystal that grows in platy discs. The crystals appear tabular and cylindrical. The diameter of the crystals rarely exceeds 400 μm, but usually consist of crystals with a diameter of 200μm and a height of 15 μm.

  9. Orthorhombic crystal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthorhombic_crystal_system

    In crystallography, the orthorhombic crystal system is one of the 7 crystal systems.Orthorhombic lattices result from stretching a cubic lattice along two of its orthogonal pairs by two different factors, resulting in a rectangular prism with a rectangular base (a by b) and height (c), such that a, b, and c are distinct.