Dictionary Definition
oligoclase n : any of a rock-forming series of
triclinic feldspars [syn: plagioclase]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
oligoclase- A plagioclase feldspar, the second member of the Albite-Anorthite solid solution series. Primarily found as small crystals in impure marble. Oligoclase contains a small amount of calcium substituting for some of the sodium in its formula. Oligoclase with reddish-golden inclusions found in Norway and Canada is called sunstone.
- Physical properties:
- Moh's Hardness: 6.0
- Specific gravity: 2.65
- Color: white, yellow, reddish-gray
- Luster: glassy
- Fracture: conchoidal
- Cleavage: two good at about 94º to each other
- Habit: Triclinic - pinacoidal. Usually twinned and striated, but this may not be visible to the unaided eye.
Related terms
- See Rock, Feldspar, Plagioclase
Extensive Definition
Oligoclase is a rock-forming mineral belonging to the
plagioclase feldspars. In chemical
composition and in its crystallographic and physical characters it
is intermediate between albite (NaAlSi3O8) and anorthite (CaAl2Si2O8). The albite :
anorthite molar ratio ranges from 90 : 10 to 70 : 30.
Oligoclase is a high sodium feldspar
crystallizing in the triclinic system. The Mohs
hardness is 6 to 6.5 and the specific
gravity is 2.64 to 2.66. The refractive
indices are: nα=1.533 - 1.543, nβ=1.537 - 1.548, and nγ=1.542 -
1.552. In color it is usually white, with shades of grey, green or
red.
The name oligoclase was given by August
Breithaupt in 1826 from the Greek oligos, little, and kasein,
to break, because the mineral was thought to have a less perfect
cleavage than albite. It had previously been recognized as a
distinct species by J. J.
Berzelius in 1824, and was named by him soda-spodumene
(Natron-spodumen), because of its resemblance in appearance to
spodumene.
Perfectly colorless and transparent glassy
material found at
Bakersville, North Carolina has occasionally been faceted as a
gemstone. Another
variety more frequently used as a gemstone is the aventurine-feldspar or
sun-stone found as reddish cleavage masses in gneiss at Tvedestrand in
southern Norway; this
presents a brilliant red to golden metallic glitter, due to the
presence of numerous small scales of hematite oriented within the
feldspar structure.
Oligoclase occurs, often accompanying orthoclase, as a constituent
of plutonic igneous
rocks such as granite, syenite, and diorite. It occurs in porphyry
and diabase dikes and
sills as
well as in the volcanic
rocks andesite and
trachyte. It also
occurs in gneiss. The best developed and largest crystals are those
found with orthoclase, quartz, epidote and calcite in veins in granite at
Arendal in
Norway. The distinctive texture of rapakivi
granite is due to oligoclase rims on orthoclase phenocrysts. Oligoclase is
also found in metamorphic
rocks formed under transitional greenschist to amphibolite facies
conditions.
Some examples show Schiller iridescence due to
the presence of exsolution lamellae on cooling in the peristerite
miscibility gap, ~An5-An18.
References
- Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., Wiley, ISBN 0-471-80580-7
- Webmineral data
- Mineral galleries
- Mindat
oligoclase in German: Oligoklas
oligoclase in Spanish: Oligoclasa
oligoclase in Hebrew: אוליגוקלז
oligoclase in Lithuanian: Oligoklazas
oligoclase in Dutch: Oligoklaas
oligoclase in Polish: Oligoklaz
oligoclase in Portuguese: Oligoclase
oligoclase in Russian:
Олигоклаз