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Calcite, which gets its name
from "chalix" the Greek word for lime, is a most amazing and
yet, most common mineral. It is one of the most common
minerals on the face of the Earth, comprising about 4% by
weight of the Earth's crust and is formed in many different
geological environments. Calcite can form rocks of
considerable mass and constitutes a significant part of all
three major rock classification types. It forms oolitic,
fossiliferous and massive limestones in sedimentary
environments and even serves as the cements for many
sandstones and shales. Limestone becomes marble from the
heat and pressure of metamorphic events. Calcite is even a
major component in the igneous rock called carbonatite and
forms the major portion of many hydrothermal veins. Some of
these rock types are composed of better than 99% calcite.
With calcite so abundant and so widely distributed it is no
wonder that it can be so varied. The crystals of calcite can
form literally a thousand different shapes by combining the
basic forms of the positive rhombohedron, negative
rhombohedron, steeply, moderately and slightly inclined
rhombohedrons, various scalahedrons, prism and pinacoid to
name a few of the more common forms. There are more than 300
crystal forms identified in calcite and these forms can
combine to produce the thousand different crystal variations.
Calcite also produces many twin varieties that are favorites
among twin collectors. There are also phantoms, included
crystals, color varieties, pseudomorphs and unique
associations. There simply is no end to the varieties of
calcite.
There are several varieties of calcite and it would be
impossible to describe them all. However there are a few
standouts. Possibly the most well known of calcite's
varieties is its most common form, the classic scalenohedron
or "Dogtooth Spar" as it is sometimes called. . This variety
appears as a double pyramid or dipyramid, but is actually a
distinctly different form. The point of the scalenohedron is
sharp and resembles the canine tooth of a dog, hence the
name.
Not necessarily a variety of calcite, cave formations are
certainly a unique aspect of calcite's story. Calcite is the
primary mineral component in cave formations. Stalactites
and stalagmites, cave veils, cave pearls, "soda straws" and
the many other different cave formations that millions of
visitors to underground caverns enjoy are made of calcite.
It is the fact that calcite is readily dissolved that these
formations occur. Overlying limestones or marbles are
dissolved away by years and years of slightly acidic ground
water to percolate into the caverns below. In fact the
caverns themselves may have been the result of water
dissolving away the calcite rich rock. As the calcite
enriched water enters a relatively dry cavern, the water
starts to evaporate and thus precipitate the calcite. The
resulting accumulations of calcite are generally extremely
pure and are colored if at all, by very small amounts of
iron or other impurities.
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PHYSICAL
CHARACTERISTICS OF CALCITE:
• Color is extremely variable but generally white or colorless
or with light shades of yellow, orange, blue, pink, red, brown,
green, black and gray. Occasionally iridescent.
• Luster is vitreous to resinous to dull in massive forms.
• Transparency: Crystals are transparent to translucent.
• Crystal System is trigonal; bar 3 2/m
• Crystal Habits are extremely variable with almost any trigonal
form possible. Common among calcite crystals are the
scalenohedron, rhombohedron, hexagonal prism, and pinacoid.
Combinations of these and over three hundred other forms can
make a multitude of crystal shapes, but always trigonal or
pseudo-hexagonal. Twinning is often seen and results in crystals
with blocky chevrons, right angled prisms, heart shapes or
dipyramidal shapes. A notch in the middle of a doubly terminated
scalenohedron is a sure sign of a twinned crystal. lamellar
twinning also seen resulting in striated cleavage surfaces.
Pseudomorphs after many minerals are known, but easily
identified as calcite. Also massive, fibrous, concretionary,
stalactitic, nodular, oolitic, stellate, dendritic, granular,
layered, etc. etc.
• Cleavage is perfect in three directions, forming rhombohedrons.
• Fracture is conchoidal.
• Hardness is 3 (only on the basal pinacoidal faces, calcite has
a hardness of less than 2.5 and can be scratched by a fingernail).
• Specific Gravity is approximately 2.7 (average)
• Streak is white.
• Other Characteristics: refractive indices of 1.49 and 1.66
causing a significant double refraction effect (when a clear
crystal is placed on a single line, two lines can then be
observed), effervesces easily with dilute acids and may be
fluorescent, phosphorescent, thermoluminescence and
triboluminescent.
• Associated Minerals are numerous but include these classic
associations: Fluorite, quartz, barite, sphalerite, galena,
celestite, sulfur, gold, copper, emerald, apatite, biotite,
zeolites, several metal sulfides, other carbonates and borates
and many other minerals.
• Best Field Indicators are crystal habit, reaction to acid,
abundance, hardness, double refraction and especially cleavage. |