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Mineralization properties of ice
Mineralization properties of ice
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Samples
Conceptually similar
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Pegmatite
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Mineralization properties of ice
These images capture the varying mineral growth structure of ice. For a substance to be defined as a mineral, it must: 1) be naturally occurring, 2) inorganic, 3) solid, 4) have a definite chemical composition, and 5) have an ordered internal structure. All of which are met by ice, such that it can naturally occur in the solid phase of H2O, where its atoms can be systematically arranged in a repeating pattern enabling growth. Some of its distinct mineral properties consist of a being brittle with a relatively soft hardness (1.5), a lack of cleavage, a hexagonal crystal system, vitreous lustre, conchoidal to uneven fracture, and massive, crusty, or fibrous crystal habits, as seen in some of the images.
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Digitized Date
12/26/2017
Creator
Dolphin, Glenn
Unique identifier
CU1STO6674
Location
Country
Canada
Province
Alberta
Municipality
City of Calgary
How can you use these images?
Permitted uses are outlined in License and Usage Rights. Usage Restrictions can only be waived by the copyright holder. Add to cart and make a request if you have any questions.
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In Copyright
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Conditions of Use
https://libanswers.ucalgary.ca/faq/199047
License URL
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
License
CC BY 4.0
Attribution
Attribution
"Mineralization properties of ice", unknown date, (CU1STO6674) by Dolphin, Glenn. Courtesy of Geoscience Images Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.