Orthoclase feldspar
Click on image for full size
Windows to the Universe Image
Related links:
Find out how to identify minerals (...and learn what shape, luster, color, streak, hardness, cleavage and fracture are all about!)
Meet some other silicate minerals!
Feldspar
Feldspar is the most common mineral in the Earth’s crust, so you are very likely to find it in the rocks you collect! It is found it all of the three rock types, but is most common in intrusive igneous rocks like granite where the crystals look white or pink.
There are several types of feldspar. The characteristics of the two most common types are listed below. These two common types of feldspar are difficult to tell apart besides their color. Color can be helpful, but beware because the same mineral can often have different colors. The sure way to tell these two apart is by looking at the crystal surfaces for thin parallel groves called striations. Plagioclase feldspar has striations but orthoclase feldspar does not.
Orthoclase
- Shape: Monoclinic (Flat
tabular or prism-shaped crystals)
- Luster: Glassy or pearly
- Color: Cream to pink
- Streak: White
- Hardness: 6 on Mohs Hardness Scale
- Cleavage: Yes
- Fracture: Conchoidal or brittle
|
Plagioclase
- Shape: Triclinic (Single prism-shaped crystals are very rare.
You are much more likely to find many crystals that have grown together
in a mass.
- Luster: Glassy or pearly
- Color: White to gray
- Streak: White
- Hardness: 6-6.5 on Mohs Hardness Scale
- Cleavage: Yes
- Fracture: Conchoidal or brittle
|
Last modified April 25, 2003 by Lisa Gardiner.
You might also be interested in:
Spotting minerals is fun! There are many different types of minerals, each with a different name and a special set of characteristics. So, if you find a mineral that you do not recognize, you can use
...moreQuartz is one of the most common mineral in Earth’s crust! Silica (Si) and Oxygen (O) are the only elements within pure quartz. If a cooling magma has silica leftover after feldspars form, quartz is likely
...more Even though there are 92 elements that are naturally found, only eight of them are common in the rocks that make up the Earth’s outer layer, the crust. Together, these 8 elements make up more than 98%
...more Look at granite closely and you can see crystals of common silicate minerals such as quartz, plagioclase feldspar and orthoclase feldspar. In fact, granite is mostly quartz and feldspar crystals. It also
...more As magma cools, elements within it bond together to form crystals of minerals. However, not all minerals can form at the same time during cooling. Some minerals grow when magma is still pretty hot, while
...moreMica minerals make some rocks sparkle! They are often found in igneous rocks such as granite and metamorphic rocks such as schist. They sparkle because light is reflected on their flat surfaces, which
...more Feldspar is the most common mineral in the Earth’s crust, so you are very likely to find it in the rocks you collect! It is found it all of the three rock types, but is most common in intrusive igneous
...more