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Scapolite, is a group of
rock-forming silicate minerals
composed of aluminium, calcium
and sodium silicate with
chlorine, carbonate and sulfate.
The tetragonal
crystals are hemihedral with
parallel faces (like scheelite),
and at times of considerable
size. They are distinct and
usually have the form of square
columns, some cleavages parallel
to the prism-faces.
Crystals are
usually white or greyish-white
and opaque, though meionite is
found as colorless glassy
crystals in the ejected
limestone blocks of Monte Somma,
Vesuvius. The hardness is 5 - 6,
and the specific gravity varies
with the chemical composition
between 2.7 (meionite) and 2.5 (marialite).
The scapolites are especially
liable to alteration by
weathering processes, with the
development of mica, kaolin,
etc., and this is the cause of
the usual opacity of the
crystals. Owing to this
alteration, and to the
variations in composition,
numerous varieties have been
distinguished by special names.
Scapolite is commonly a mineral
of metamorphic origin, occurring
usually in crystalline marbles,
but also with pyroxene in
schists and gneisses. The long
slender prisms abundant in the
crystalline marbles and schists
in the Pyrenees are known as
dipyre or couzeranite. Large
crystals of common scapolite (wernerite)
are found in the apatite
deposits in the neighborhood of
Bamle near Brevik in Norway, and
have resulted from the
alteration of the plagioclase
feldspar of a gabbro. |