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Albite
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Albite is a . It is the sodium endmember of the plagioclase series. It represents a plagioclase with less than 10% content. The pure albite endmember has the formula . It is a tectosilicate. Its color is usually pure white, hence its name from , albus. It is a common constituent in rocks.


Properties
Albite crystallizes with pinacoidal forms. Its is about 2.62 and it has a of 6 to 6.5. Albite almost always exhibits often as minute parallel striations on the crystal face. Albite often occurs as fine parallel segregations alternating with pink in as a result of exolution on cooling.

There are two variants of albite, which are referred to as 'low albite' and 'high albite'; the latter is also known as 'analbite'. Although both variants are triclinic, they differ in the volume of their unit cell, which is slightly larger for the 'high' form. The 'high' form can be produced from the 'low' form by heating above High albite can be found in meteor impact craters such as in Winslow, Arizona. Upon further heating to more than the changes from triclinic to ; this variant is also known as 'monalbite'. Monalbite on Mindat Albite melts at .

Oftentimes, potassium can replace the sodium characteristic in albite at amounts of up to 10%. When this is exceeded the mineral is then considered to be .


Occurrence
It occurs in and masses (often as the variety cleavelandite), in some vein deposits, and forms part of the typical metamorphic facies for rocks of originally composition. Minerals that albite is often considered associated with in occurrence include biotite, hornblende, orthoclase, muscovite and quartz.


Discovery
Albite was first reported in 1815 for an occurrence in Finnbo, , , .


Use
Albite is used as a , albeit semiprecious. Albite is also used by geologists as it is identified as an important rock forming mineral. There is some industrial use for the mineral such as the manufacture of and ceramics.

One of the iridescent varieties of albite, discovered in 1925 near the coast by academician Alexander Fersman, became widely known under the trade name . Alexander Fersman. «Memories of the Stone». — Moscow: Publishing House of the USSR Academy of Sciences, 1958.


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