Dolomite
- Chemistry: CaMg(CO3)2, Calcium Magnesium
Carbonate
- Class: Carbonates
- Group: Dolomite
- Uses: in some cements, as a source of
magnesium and as mineral specimens.
- Specimens
Dolomite, which is named for the French
mineralogist Deodat de Dolomieu, is a common sedimentary
rock-forming mineral that can be found in massive beds several hundred
feet thick. They are found all over the world and are quite common in
sedimentary rock sequences. These rocks are called appropriately enough dolomite
or dolomitic limestone. Disputes have arisen as to how these dolomite beds
formed and the debate has been called the "Dolomite Problem".
Dolomite at present time, does not form on the surface of the earth; yet
massive layers of dolomite can be found in ancient rocks. That is quite a
problem for sedimentologists who see sandstones, shales and limestones
formed today almost before their eyes. Why no dolomite? Well there are no
good simple answers, but it appears that dolomite rock is one of the few
sedimentary rocks that undergoes a significant mineralogical change after
it is deposited. They are originally deposited as calcite/aragonite rich
limestones, but during a process call diagenesis the calcite and/or
aragonite is altered to dolomite. The process is not metamorphism, but
something just short of that. Magnesium rich ground waters that have a
significant amount of salinity are probably crucial and warm, tropical
near ocean environments are probably the best source of dolomite
formation.
Dolomite in addition to the sedimentary
beds is also found in metamorphic marbles, hydrothermal veins and
replacement deposits. Except in its pink, curved crystal habit dolomite is
hard to distinguish from its second cousin, calcite. But calcite is
far more common and effervesces easily when acid is applied to it. But
this is not the case with dolomite which only weakly bubbles with acid and
only when the acid is warm or the dolomite is powdered. Dolomite is also
slightly harder, denser and never forms scalenohedrons (calcite's
most typical habit).
Dolomite differs from calcite, CaCO3,
in the addition of magnesium ions to make the formula, CaMg(CO3)2.
The magnesium ions are not the same size as calcium and the two ions seem
incompatible in the same layer. In calcite the structure is composed of
alternating layers of carbonate ions, CO3, and calcium ions. In
dolomite, the magnesiums occupy one layer by themselves followed by a
carbonate layer which is followed by an exclusively calcite layer and so
forth. Why the alternating layers? It is probably the significant size
difference between calcium and magnesium and it is more stable to group
the differing sized ions into same sized layers. Other carbonate minerals
that have this alternating layered structure belong to the Dolomite Group.
Dolomite is the principle member of the Dolomite Group of minerals
which includes ankerite, the only other somewhat common member.
Dolomite forms rhombohedrons as its typical
crystal habit. But for some reason, possibly twinning, some crystals curve
into saddle-shaped crystals. These crystals represent a unique crystal
habit that is well known as classical dolomite. Not all crystals of
dolomite are curved and some impressive specimens show well formed, sharp
rhombohedrons. The luster of dolomite is unique as well and is probably
the best illustration of a pearly luster. The pearl-like effect is best
seen on the curved crystals as a sheen of light can sweep across the
curved surface. Dolomite can be several different colors, but colorless
and white are very common. However it is dolomite's pink color that sets
another unique characteristic for dolomite. Crystals of dolomite are well
known for their typical beautiful pink color, pearly luster and unusual
crystal habit and it is these clusters that make very attractive
specimens.
Physical Characteristics:
- Color is often pink or pinkish
and can be colorless, white, yellow, gray or even brown or black when
iron is present in the crystal.
- Luster is pearly to vitreous to
dull.
- Transparency crystals are
transparent to translucent.
- Crystal System is trigonal; bar 3
- Crystal Habits include saddle
shaped rhombohedral twins and simple rhombs some with slightly curved
faces, also prismatic, massive, granular and rock forming. Never found
in scalenohedrons.
- Cleavage is perfect in three
directions forming rhombohedrons.
- Fracture is conchoidal.
- Hardness is 3.5-4
- Specific Gravity is 2.86
(average)
- Streak is white.
- Other Characteristics: Unlike
calcite, effervesces weakly with warm acid or when first
powdered with cold HCl.
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