Normandite

Normandite is a brittle orange brown sorosilicate mineral discovered in 1997 by Charles Normand (born 1963), of Montreal. Normandite occurs in Khibiny MassifKolaRussia; in Poudrette quarry, Mont-Saint-Hilaire, Quebec (type locality) and TenerifeCanary Islands. It is found in nepheline syenite and in miarolitic cavities in nepheline syenite, associated with nephelinealbitemicroclineaegirinenatrolitecatapleiitekupletskiteeudialytecancrinitevilliaumiterinkite, and donnayite-(Y).

Normandite
Normandite.jpg
General
CategoryMineral
Formula
(repeating unit)
NaCa(Mn2+,Fe2+)(Ti,Nb,Zr)Si2O7(O,F)2
Crystal systemMonoclinic
Space groupP21/a (no. 14)
Identification
Mohs scale hardness5 - 6
Specific gravity3.48 - 3.5
References[1]

Normandite has a chemical formula of NaCa(Mn2+,Fe2+)(Ti,Nb,Zr)Si2O7(O,F)2. It crystallizes in the monoclinic-prismatic crystal system. It occurs as transparent to translucent orange-brown aggregates of subparallel acicular crystals up to 10 mm in length, and as patches of yellow, fibrous crystals. It has a white to very pale yellow streak and vitreous luster. It is brittle, with distinct {100} and {001} cleavages, and a conchoidal fracture. It has a specific gravity of 3.48 to 3.5, a Mohs hardness of 5 to 6 and refractive index values of nα=1.743, nβ=1.785 and nγ=1.810. It is named after Charles Normand (born 1963), Canadian geologist.

 

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.