|
ANHYDRITE , a See also: mineral, differing chemically from the more commonly occurring See also: gypsum in containing no See also: water of See also: crystallization, being anhydrous calcium sulphate, CaSO4
.
It crystallizes in the orthorhombic See also: system, and has three directions of perfect cleavage parallel to the three planes of symmetry
.
It is not isomorphous with the orthorhombic barium and strontium sulphates, as might be expected from the chemical formulae
.
Distinctly See also: developed crystals are somewhat rare, the mineral usually presenting the See also: form of cleavage masses
.
The hardness is 32 and the specific gravity 2.9
.
The colour is See also: white, sometimes greyish, bluish or reddish
.
On the best developed of the three cleavages the lustre is pearly, on other surfaces it is of the ordinary vitreous type
.
Anhydrite is most frequently found in
See also: salt deposits with gypsum; it was, for instance, first discovered, in 1794, in a salt mine near See also: Hall in
See also: Tirol
.
Other localities which produce typical specimens of the mineral, and where the mode of occurrence is the same, are See also: Stassfurt in See also: Germany, Aussee in Styria and Bex in See also: Switzerland
.
At all these places it is only met with at some See also: depth; nearer the See also: surface of the ground it has been altered to gypsum owing to absorption of water
.
From an aqueous solution calcium sulphate is deposited as crystals of gypsum, but when the solution contains an excess of sodium or potassium chloride anhydrite is deposited
.
This is one of the several methods by which the mineral has been prepared artificially, and is identical with its mode of origin in nature, the mineral having crystallized out in salt basins
.
The name anhydrite was given by A . G . See also: Werner in 1804, because of the See also: absence of water, as contrasted with the presence of water in gypsum
.
Other names for the See also: species are muriacite and karstenite; the former, an earlier name, being given under the impression that the substance was a chloride (muriate)
.
A See also: peculiar variety occurring as contorted concretionary masses is known as tripe-See also: stone, and a scaly granular variety, from Vulpino, near
See also: Bergamo, in See also: Lombardy, as vulpinite; the latter is cut and polished for ornamental purposes
.
(L
.
J
.
|
|
|
[back] ANHALT |
[next] ANI (anc. Abnicum) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.