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CALCITE , a See also: mineral consisting of naturally occurring calcium carbonate, CaCO3, crystallizing in the See also: rhombohedral See also: system
.
With the exception of See also: quartz, it is the most widely distributed of minerals, whilst in the beautiful development and extraordinary variety of See also: form of its crystals it is surpassed by none
.
In the massive condition it occurs as large See also: rock-masses (marble, lime-See also: stone,
See also: chalk) which are often of organic origin, being formed of the remains of molluscs, corals, crinoids, &c., the hard parts of which consist largely of calcite
.
The name calcite (See also: Lat. calx, calcis, meaning burnt lime) is of comparatively See also: recent origin, and was first applied, in 1836, to the " barleycorn " pseudomorphs of calcium carbonate after celestite from See also: Sangerhausen in Thuringia; it was not until about 1$43 that the name was used in its See also: present sense
.
The mineral had, however, long been known under the names calcareous spar and calc-spar, and the beautifully transparent variety called See also: Iceland-spar had been much studied
.
The strong See also: double refraction and perfect cleavages of Iceland-spar were described in detail by See also: Erasmus Bartholinus in 1669 in his See also: book Experimenta Crystalli Islandici disdiaclastici; the study of the same mineral led Christiaan Huygens to discover in 1690 the See also: laws of double refraction, and E
.
L
.
See also: Malus in 1808 the polarization of See also: light
.
An important See also: property of calcite is the See also: great ease with which it may be cleaved in three directions; the three perfect cleavages
969
are parallel to the faces of the See also: primitive rhombohedron, and the angle between them was determined by W
.
H
.
Wollaston in r8i2, with the aid of his newly invented reflective goniometer, to be 74 55'
.
The cleavage is of great help in distinguishing calcite from other minerals of similar appearance
.
The hardness of 3 (it is readily scratched with a knife), the specific gravity of 2.72, and the fact that it effervesces briskly in contact with cold dilute acids are also characters of determinative value . Crystals of calcite are extremely varied in form, but, as aSee also: rule, they may be referred to four distinct habits, namely: rhombohedral, prismatic, scalenohedral and See also: tabular
.
The primitive rhombohedron, r {Too} (fig
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1), is comparatively rare except in combination with other forms
.
A flatter rhombohedron, e { I to}, is shown in fig
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2, and a more acute one, f {rif}, in fig
.
3
.
These three rhombohedra are related in such a manner that, when in combination, the faces of r truncate the polar edges of f, and the faces of e truncate the edges of r
.
The crystal of prismatic habit shown in fig
.
4 is a combination of the prism m {211} and the rhombohedron e { T lc)} ; fig
.
5 is a combination of the scalenohedron v {201} and the rhombohedron r {See also: roc) ; and the crystal of tabular habit represented in fig
.
6 is a combination of the basal pinacoid c 1 1, prism m i f ) , and rhombohedron e { T To}
.
In these figures only six distinct forms (r, e, f, m, v, c) are Floc . 1-6.-Crystals of Calcite . represented, but more than 400 have been recorded for calcite, whilst the combinations of them are almost endless . Depending on the habits of the crystals, certain trivial names have been used, such, for example, as See also: dog-tooth-spar for the crystals of scalenohedral habit, so See also: common in the See also: Derbyshire See also: lead mines and See also: limestone caverns; nail-See also: head-spar for crystals terminated by the obtuse rhombohedron e, which are common in the lead mines of See also: Alston See also: Moor in See also: Cumberland; slate-spar (See also: German Schieferspath) for crystals of tabular habit, and some-times as thin as paper: cannon-spar for crystals of prismatic habit terminated by the basal pinacoid c
.
Calcite is also remarkable for the variety and perfection of its twinned crystals
.
Twinned crystals, though not of infrequent occurrence, are, however, far less common than See also: simple (untwinned) crystals
.
No less than four well-defined twin-laws are to be distinguished:
i
.
Twin-See also: plane c (III).—Here there is rotation of one portion with respect to the other through 18o° about the See also: principal (trigonal) See also: axis, which is perpendicular to the plane c (III); or the same result may be obtained by reflection across this plane
.
Fig
.
7 shows a prismatic crystal (like fig
.
4) twinned in this manner, and fig
.
8 represents a twinned scalenohedron v {2oi}
.
ii . Twin-plane e (11o).—The principal axes of the two portions are inclined at an angle of 52° 3o1' . Repeated twinning on this plane is very common, and the twin-lamellae (fig . 9) to which it gives rise are often to be observed in the grains of calcite of crystalline limestones which have been subjected to pressure . This lamellar twinning is of secondary origin; it may be readily produced artificially by pressure, for example, by pressing a knife into the edge of a cleavage rhombohedron . t 970 iii . Twin-plane r (roo).—Here the principal axes of the two portions are nearly at right angles (8q° 14'), and one of the directions of cleavage in both portions is parallel to the twin-plane . See also: Fine crystals of prismatic habit twinned according to this See also: law were formerly found in considerable numbers at Wheal Wrey in See also: Cornwall, and of scalenohedral habit at Eyam in Derbyshire and Cleator Moor in Cumberland; those from the last two localities are known as " butterfly twins " or " See also: heart-shaped twins " (fig. ro), according to their shape
.
iv
.
Twin-plane f (111).—The principal axes are here inclined at 53° 46'
.
This is the rarest twin-law of calcite
.
Calcite when pure, as in the well-known Iceland-spar, is perfectly transparent and colourless
.
The lustre is vitreous . Owing to the presence of various impurities, the transparency and colour may vary considerably . Crystals are often nearlySee also: white or colourless, usually with a slight yellowish tinge
.
The yellowish colour is in most cases due to the presence of iron, but in some cases it has been proved to be due to organic
See also: matter (such as apocrenic acid) derived from the humus overlying the rocks in which the crystals were formed
.
An opaque calcite of a grass-See also: green colour, occurring as large cleavage masses in central See also: India and known as hislopite, owes its colour to enclosed " green-See also: earth " (See also: glauconite and celadonite)
.
A stalagmitic calcite of a
beautiful See also: purple colour, from Reichelsdorf in Hesse, is coloured by colbalt
.
Optically, calcite is uniaxial with negative bi-refringence, the See also: index of refraction for the ordinary ray being greater than for the extraordinary ray; for sodium-light the former is 1.6585 and the latter 1.4862
.
The difference, 0.1723, between these two indices gives a measure of the bi-refringence or double refraction
.
Although the double refraction of some other minerals is greater than that of calcite (e.g. for See also: cinnabar it is 0.347, and for See also: calomel 0.683), yet this phenomenon can be best demonstrated in calcite, since it is a mineral obtainable in large pieces of perfect transparency
.
Owing to the strong double refraction and the consequent wide separation of the two polarized rays of light traversing the crystal, an See also: object viewed through a cleavage rhombohedron of Iceland-spar is seen double, hence the name doubly-refracting spar
.
Iceland-spar is extensively used in the construction of Nicol's prisms for polariscopes, polarizing microscopes and saccharimeters, and of dichroscopes•for testing the pleochroism of See also: gem-stones
.
Chemically, calcite has the same composition as the orthorhombic See also: aragonite (q.v.), these minerals being dimorphous forms of calcium carbonate
.
Well-crystallized material, such • as Iceland-spar, usually consists of perfectly pure calcium carbonate, but at other times the calcium may be isomorphously replaced by small amounts of magnesium, barium, strontium, manganese,See also: zinc or lead
.
When the elements named are present in large amount we have the varieties dolomitic calcite, baricalcite, strontianocalcite, ferrocalcite, manganocalcite, zincocalcite and plumbocalcite, respectively
.
Mechanically enclosed impurities are also frequently present, and it is to these that the colour is often due
.
A remarkablecase of enclosed impurities is presented by the so-called See also: Fontainebleau limestone, which consists of crystals of calcite of an acute rhombohedral form (fig
.
3) enclosing 5o to 6o% of quartz-See also: sand
.
Similar crystals, but with the form of an acute hexagonal See also: pyramid, and enclosing 64% of sand, have recently been found in large quantity over a wide See also: area in See also: South Dakota, See also: Nebraska and See also: Wyoming
.
The See also: case of hislopite, which encloses up to 20% of "green earth," has been noted above
.
In addition to the varieties of calcite noted above, some others, depending on the See also: state of aggregation of the material, are distinguished
.
A finely fibrous form is known as satin-spar (q.v.), a name also applied to fibrous See also: gypsum: the most typical example of this is the snow-white material, often with a rosy tinge and a pronounced silky lustre, which occurs in See also: veins in the Carboniferous shales of Alston Moor in Cumberland
.
Finely scaly varieties with a pearly lustre are known as See also: argentine and aphrite (German Schaumspath); soft, earthy and dull white varieties as agaric mineral, rock-milk, rock-See also: meal, &c.—these form a transition to marls, chalk, &c
.
Of the granular and compact forms numerous varieties are distinguished (see LIME-STONE and MARBLE)
.
In the form of stalactites calcite is of extremely common occurrence
.
Each stalactite usually consists of an aggregate of radially arranged crystalline individuals, though sometimes it may consist of a single individual with crystal faces See also: developed at the See also: free end
.
See also: Onyx-See also: marbles or See also: Oriental alabaster (see ALABASTER) and other stalagmitic de-posits also consist of calcite, and so do the allied deposits of travertine, calc-See also: sinter or calc-tufa
.
The modes of occurrence of calcite are very varied
.
It is a common See also: gangue mineral in metalliferous deposits, and in the form of crystals is often associated with ores of lead, iron, copper and See also: silver
.
It is a common product of alteration in igneous rocks, and frequently occurs as well-developed crystals in association with See also: zeolites lining the amygdaloidal cavities of basaltic and other rocks
.
Veins and cavities in limestones are usually lined with crystals of calcite
.
The wide distribution, under various conditions, of crystallized calcite is readily explained by the solubility of calcium carbonate in See also: water containing See also: carbon dioxide, and the ease with which the material is again deposited in the crystallized state when the carbon dioxide is liberated by evaporation
.
On this also depends the formation of stalactites and calc-sinter
.
Localities at which beautifully crystallized specimens of calcite are found are extremely numerous
.
For beauty of crystals and variety of forms the haernatite mines of the Cleator Moor See also: district in west Cumberland and the Furness district in See also: north See also: Lancashire are unsurpassed
.
The lead mines of Alston in Cumberland and of Derbyshire, and the silver mines of Andreas-See also: berg in the Harz and Guanajuato in Mexico have yielded many fine specimens
.
From the zinc mines of See also: Joplin in See also: Missouri enormous crystals of See also: golden-yellow and amethystine See also: colours have been recently obtained
.
At all the localities here mentioned the crystals occur with metalliferous ores . In Iceland the mode of occurrence is quite distinct, the mineral being here found in a cavity in See also: basalt
.
The See also: quarry, which since the 17th century has supplied the fatuous Iceland-spar, is in a cavity in basalt, the cavity itself measuring 12 by 5 yds. in area and about ro ft. in height
.
It is situated quite close to the See also: farm Helgustadir, about an See also: hour's ride from the trading station of Eskifjordur on Reydar Fjorc#ur, on the See also: east See also: coast of Iceland
.
This cavity when first found was filled with pure crystallized masses and enormous crystals
.
The crystals measure up to a yard across, and are rhombohedral or scalenohedral in habit; their faces are usually dull and corroded or coated with stilbite
.
In recent years much of the material taken out has not been of sufficient transparency for See also: optical purposes, and this, together with the very limited supply, has caused a considerable rise in price
.
Only very occasionally has calcite from any locality other than Iceland been used for the construction of a Nicol's prism
.
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