Online Encyclopedia

CLINTONITE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 530 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLINTONITE  , a

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group of micaceous minerals known as the " brittle micas." Like the micas and chlorites, they are mono-clinic in crystallization and have a perfect cleavage parallel to the flat
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surface of the plates or scales, but differ markedly from these in the brittleness of the laminae; they are also considerably harder, the hardness of chloritoid being as high as 61 on Mohs' scale . They differ chemically from the micas in containing less
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silica and no alkalis, and from the chlorites in containing much less
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water; in many respects they are intermediate between the micas and chlorites . The following
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species are distinguished: Margarite is a basic calcium aluminium silicate, H2CaAl4Si2O12, and is classed by some authors as a lime-
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mica . It forms white pearly scales, and was at first known as pearl-mica and after-wards as margarite, from µapyapirns, a pearl . It is a characteristic associate of
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corundum, of which it is frequently an alteration product (facts which suggested the synonymous names corundellite and emerylite), and is found in the emery deposits of
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Asia Minor and the Grecian
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Archipelago, and with corundum at several localities in the
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United States . Seybertite, Brandisite and Xanthophyllite are closely allied species consisting of basic magnesium, calcium and aluminium silicate, and have been regarded as isomorphous mixtures of a silicate (H2CaM$4Si3O12) and an aluminate (H2CaMgA16O12) . Seybertite (the
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original clintonite) occurs as reddish-brown to copper-red, brittle, foliated masses in metamorphic
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limestone at Amity, New York; brandisite as yellowish-green hexagonal prisms in metamorphic limestone in the Fassathal, Tirol; xanthophyllite as yellow folia and as distinct crystals (waluewite) in chloride schists in the Urals . Chloritoid has the formula H2(Fe,Mg)Al2SiOr . It forms
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tabular crystals and scales, with indistinct hexagonal outlines, which are often curved or bent and aggregated in rosettes . The colour is dark grey or green; a characteristic feature is the pleochroism, the pleochroic colours varying from yellowish-green to indigo-blue . Hardness, 61; specific gravity, 3.4-3.6 . It occurs as isolated scales scattered through schistose rocks and phyllites of dynamo-metamorphic origin .

The ottrelites of the phyllites and ottrelite-schists of Ottrez and other localities in the Belgian

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Ardennes is a manganiferous variety of chloritoid, but owing to enclosed impurities the analyses differ widely from those of typical chloritoid . (L . J .

End of Article: CLINTONITE
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SIR HENRY CLINTON (c. 1738-1795)
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