Rocks & Minerals B/C
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
Does anyone want to set up a test exchange with me for rocks and minerals?
Clarification: I am only exchanging home-made tests(not illegal ones from invites) and all of my tests that get swapped will be uploaded to the wiki at the end of the season.
Clarification: I am only exchanging home-made tests(not illegal ones from invites) and all of my tests that get swapped will be uploaded to the wiki at the end of the season.
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- Cade
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
This one's a tough one. I found this mineral on a trail two weeks ago, and I still don't know what it is. I am leaning towards malachite, but what does anybody else think it is? I will answer questions about its property.
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
it's a bit hard to tell from this angle. The green is most likely malachite; I can't think of anything else it could be since amazonite doesn't come in such a powdery form.
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
There's a lot of cool looking minerals encrusted on this rock. I don't know what the white stuff is from the picture alone...Where did you find it?
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
It doesn't matter where I got it from, because at regionals, my teammate found a stash of rocks & minerals a school obviously dumped onto the dirt (who knows why?). Well there was about 10 of us digging through snow and weeds finding topaz, jasper, many quartz, etc. Like I said before, I can answer questions about its physical properties.piimasta314 wrote:There's a lot of cool looking minerals encrusted on this rock. I don't know what the white stuff is from the picture alone...Where did you find it?
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
Does anyone know what almandine looks like under rotating polarizers? That was on our state test and I'm just curious.
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
Really? They asked about minerals under cross polars? I'm surprised that came up, that's college level Mineralogy.inluvwyth_WANTED wrote:Does anyone know what almandine looks like under rotating polarizers? That was on our state test and I'm just curious.
When you look at mineral grains under a polarized microscope, you'll see something pretty cool; they'll appear to be a different color and if you rotate the stage, they'll slowly turn black and then turn back into that color, every 90 degrees. When they're black, you say that the mineral is "extinct", and that happens because the polarizing lens on allows light to pass through at two directions perpendicular to each other, and when the mineral is rotated, the crystal structure will block light in those exact two directions, making the mineral appear black. This technique is very useful for identifying small mineral grains in rocks, as no two minerals look the same under cross polars and they have distinct colors and patterns.
One thing I should mention is that these minerals show color under polarized light because they are anisotropic. That means that they do not exhibit equal optical properties in all directions, and so will change depending on the direction they turn. Garnet, however, is an isotropic mineral. It has the same properties in all directions due to its cubic crystal system. What this means is that garnet (and other isotropic crystals) will ALWAYS be extinct under cross polars because they only let in light in the direction blocked by the cross polars, no matter which way you turn it. That means that it will always appear black, no matter what.
TL;DR: Garnet is isotropic and will appear black under rotating polarizers.
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
Thank you so much for answering! I just got totally unrelated searches or material that I didn't understand. Thanks again.
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
No problem. I'm just surprised it came up, that seems like it's way beyond the scope of the event. I mean, I love mineralogy and I like educating people about it, but having microscopy coming up in a jr. high event seems weird.inluvwyth_WANTED wrote:Thank you so much for answering! I just got totally unrelated searches or material that I didn't understand. Thanks again.
2009 events:
Fossils: 1st @ reg. 3rd @ states (stupid dinosaurs...) 5th @ nats.
Dynamic: 1st @ reg. 19thish @ states, 18th @ nats
Herpetology (NOT the study of herpes): NA
Enviro Chem: 39th @ states =(
Cell Bio: 9th @ reg. 18th @ nats
Remote: 6th @ states 3rd @ Nats
Ecology: 5th @ Nats
Fossils: 1st @ reg. 3rd @ states (stupid dinosaurs...) 5th @ nats.
Dynamic: 1st @ reg. 19thish @ states, 18th @ nats
Herpetology (NOT the study of herpes): NA
Enviro Chem: 39th @ states =(
Cell Bio: 9th @ reg. 18th @ nats
Remote: 6th @ states 3rd @ Nats
Ecology: 5th @ Nats
- piimasta314
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Re: Rocks & Minerals B/C
Sorry I was unclear. I was just curious to what park you were in when you found that rock because it looks cool.Cade wrote:It doesn't matter where I got it from, because at regionals, my teammate found a stash of rocks & minerals a school obviously dumped onto the dirt (who knows why?). Well there was about 10 of us digging through snow and weeds finding topaz, jasper, many quartz, etc. Like I said before, I can answer questions about its physical properties.piimasta314 wrote:There's a lot of cool looking minerals encrusted on this rock. I don't know what the white stuff is from the picture alone...Where did you find it?
I'm really bad at identification so I can't help you much beyond this point...
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