World of Dinosaurs/Mineralogy/Feldspars
Appearance
Feldspar is made of oxygen, silica, and lots of little cations, like calcium, potassium, etc.
Here is a 3D model of a feldspar. This is another example of a slightly different feldspar.
Attributes
[edit | edit source]- Feldspar is opaque with a greasy luster.
- One chemical form is a dusty pink.
- The other form is a dirty white.
- It forms as a trapezoid prisms - like cubes, but with a little bit of a lean.
- You can find big chunks - the size of a golf ball or racketball - while hiking in the mountains.
- Usually we see feldspar as the opaque bits of granite, as the opaque grains in sand, or as the dull and orange-y bits in sandstone.
- Feldspar is hard to scratch, hard to dissolve, and will break if a hammer hits it.
- It has a mix of ionic and covalent bonds.
- Dissolving or breaking feldspar is easier than dissolving or breaking quartz, but harder than mica.
- Broken feldspar will keep making smaller and smaller trapezoid prisms
- This is because there are lines of weakness formed by ionic bonds.
- The weak planes break, leaving crisp sides to the little baby trapezoids.
- Feldspar chunks can get sloppy edges.
- Chemical weathering can attack the edges of feldspar chunks.
- It's easier to dissolve feldspar than quartz.
- Tiny sand grains made of feldspar mineral might look a little bit more rounded off than their quartz neighbors.
Where to find Feldspar and how it's formed
[edit | edit source]Feldspar forms naturally without help from life in igneous rocks.
- It can form in magma that cools slowly, deep within Earth's crust.
- Examples include granite and diorite.
- Feldspar crystals are the opaque sections that look like white chocolate or have a pink hue.
Importance in sedimentary rocks
[edit | edit source]Sandy beaches in California, Oregon, and Washington include lots of quartz grains, and often an equal number of feldspar chunks.
Feldspar forms by:
- Weathering the original rock where the feldspar formed, possibly an igneous granite;
- Transporting and breaking the feldspar in a river;
- Further breaking the feldspar as they shift at a beach.
Feldspar CAN get destroyed by enough weathering and erosion.
- Extremely "mature" sand will have no feldspar, because it's been weathering and eroding for so long.
- You can tell how "mature" a sand, or the grains in a sandstone, are by:
- The minerals present
- How rounded-off the grains of feldspar and quartz look.
- More angular chunks means fresher grains, less travel, etc.
- More rounded-off means longer time or space traveled.
Sand can make SANDSTONE in the right conditions