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Systematic Mineralogy Description of how minerals are divided into groups Groups based on anions Single anion (Cl-) Anion group (SiO44-) Further divided based on structures Divisions Class (anion division) Family (structural division – silicates mostly) Group (structural division) Series (solid solution) Species (individual minerals) Varieties (substituted elements) Example Ca-grunerite: A Ca-rich variety Of a mineral species In the cummingtonite-grunerite series Of the amphibole group Of the inosilicate family Of the silicate class Mineral class Native elements Oxides Hydroxides Halides Sulfides Sulfates Carbonates Phosphates Silicates Anion or anion gp N/A O2OHCl-, Br-, FS2SO42CO32PO43SiO44- Silicates The most common group of minerals forming Earth’s crust 25% of all minerals (~1000) 40% of rock forming minerals 90% of earth’s crust – i.e., those minerals you are likely to find Silicate Structure Basic building block: silica tetrahedron Si4+ with four O2- surrounding it Net charge is 4Mesodesmic, polymerization Tetrahedron can share oxygen atoms Silica Tetrahedron Fig. 11-1 Six groups of silicate minerals Orthosilicates = Nesosilicates Disilicates = Sorosilicates Single tetrahedron Two tetrahedrons share single oxygen Ring silicates = Cyclosilicates 4, 5, or 6 tetrahedron share two oxygen Chain silicates = Inosilicates Sheet silicates = Phyllosilicates 2 or 3 oxygen shared, arranged in single or double chain 3 oxygen shared in sheets Framework silicates = Tectosilicates All 4 oxygen are shared Ortho(Neso) Di(Soro) Ring (Cyclo) Sheet (Phyllo) Chain – double and single (Ino) Framework (Tecto) Fig. 11-2 Z/O ratios Z = Si tetrahedral sites Can be other cations, most commonly Al Z/O ratio depends on type of silicate Ortho = 1/4 Di = 2/7 Ring = 1/3 Chain, single = 1/3; double = 4/11 Sheet = 2/5 Framework = 1/2 Other ions Quartz (and polymorphs) only minerals with only Si and O All other silicates are charge balanced by other cations “glue” that holds together silica tetrahedron Degree of polymerization depends on availability of Si Quartz and feldspars (framework): Si-rich environments Si/O = ½ Olivine (orthosilicate): Si-poor environment Si/O = ¼ Mafic vs Felsic Mafic – rich in Magnesium and Iron (Ferrum), Si-poor E.g. biotite, amphiboles, pyroxenes, and olivine Commonly dark colored Felsic – rich in Si and Al E.g. Feldspars, Quartz (SiO2), muscovite, feldspathoids Commonly light colored