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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ORC-PAI |
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ORTHOCLASE , an important rock-forming mineral
pinacoid: one individual may be brought into the position of the other by a rotation of 18o about the vertical crystallographic axis
An important character of orthoclase is the cleavage. There is a direction of perfect cleavage parallel to the basal plane c, on which plane the lustre is consequently often pearly; and one less highly developed parallel to the plane of symmetry b. The angle between these two cleavages is 900, hence the name Catholic Apostolic Eastern Church "), the historical repreorthoclase (from the Gr. bpBos, right, and uxav, to break), given by A. Breithaupt in 1823, who was the first to distinguish orthoclase from the other felspars. There are also imperfect cleavages parallel to the faces of the prism m (rio). The hardness is 6, and the sp. gr. 2.56. Crystals are some-times colourless and transparent with a glassy aspect, as in the varieties adularia, sanidine and the rhyacolite of Monte Somma, Vesuvius
The optical characters are somewhat variable, the plane of the optic axes being perpendicular to the plane of symmetry in some crystals and parallel to it in others: further, when some crystals are heated, the optic axes gradually change from one position to the other. In all cases, however, the acute negative bisectrix of the optic axes lies in the plane of symmetry and is inclined to the edge b/c at 3-7, or, in varieties rich in soda, at 10-12. The mean refractive index is 1.524, and the double
Analyses of orthoclase usually prove the presence of small amounts of soda and lime in addition to potash. These constituents are, however, probably present as plagioclase (albite and oligoclase) intergrown with the orthoclase. The two minerals are interlaminated parallel to the ortho-pinacoid (Too) or the pinacoid (8or), and they may readily be distinguished in the flesh-red aventurine-felspar, known as perthite, from Perth in Lanark
syenite
Orthoclase forms an essential constituent of many acidic igneous rocks (granite, syenite
porphyry , trachyte, phonolite, &c.) and of crystalline schists and gneisses. In porphyries and in some granites (e.g. those of Shap in Westmorland, Cornwall
mineral
The commonest alteration product of orthoclase is kaolin
kaolin
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