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  2. Halite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halite

    Germany, Spain, the Netherlands, Denmark, Romania and Iran also have salt domes. [13] Salt glaciers exist in arid Iran where the salt has broken through the surface at high elevation and flows downhill. In these cases, halite is said to be behaving like a rheid. Unusual, purple, fibrous vein-filling halite is found in France and

  3. Pseudomorph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudomorph

    The original shape of the mineral remains unchanged, but chemical composition, color, hardness, and other properties change to those of the replacing mineral. This happens typically when a mineral of one composition changes by chemical reaction to another of similar composition, retaining the original crystalline shape. It can occur due to the ...

  4. Anhydrite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anhydrite

    Anhydrite is 1–3% of the minerals in salt domes and is generally left as a cap at the top of the salt when the halite is removed by pore waters. The typical cap rock is a salt, topped by a layer of anhydrite, topped by patches of gypsum, topped by a layer of calcite. [8]

  5. Galena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galena

    Galena belongs to the octahedral sulfide group of minerals that have metal ions in octahedral positions, such as the iron sulfide pyrrhotite and the nickel arsenide niccolite. The galena group is named after its most common member, with other isometric members that include manganese bearing alabandite and niningerite. [8] [4]

  6. Hopper crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopper_crystal

    Hoppering is common in many minerals, including lab-grown bismuth, galena, quartz (called skeletal or fenster crystals), gold, calcite, halite (salt), and water (ice). In 2017, Frito-Lay filed for (and later received) a patent [1] for a salt cube hopper crystal. Because the shape increases surface area to volume, it allows people to taste more ...

  7. Halide mineral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halide_mineral

    The Atacama Desert has large quantities of halide minerals as well as chlorates, iodates, oxyhalides, nitrates, borates and other water-soluble minerals. Not only do those minerals occur in subsurface geologic deposits, they also form crusts on the Earth's surface due to the low rainfall (the Atacama is the world's driest desert as well as one ...

  8. List of minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_minerals

    This is a list of minerals which have Wikipedia articles. Minerals are distinguished by various chemical and physical properties. Differences in chemical composition and crystal structure distinguish the various species. Within a mineral species there may be variation in physical properties or minor amounts of impurities that are recognized by ...

  9. Polyhalite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyhalite

    Despite the similarity in names between polyhalite and halite (the naturally occurring form of table salt), their only connection is that both are evaporite minerals. The use of the Greek words for many and salt in polyhalite is due to polyhalite consisting of several metals that can form salts in the more general sense of the word salt used in ...