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Natrolite is a species belonging to the group. It is a hydrated and with the formula . The type locality is , , .

It was named natrolite by Martin Heinrich Klaproth in 1803. The name is derived from natron (νατρών), the Greek word for , in reference to the sodium content, and lithos (λίθος), meaning stone. Needle stone or needle-zeolite are other informal names, alluding to the common acicular habit of the , which are often very slender and are aggregated in divergent tufts. The crystals are frequently overgrowths of natrolite, , and in various orders.


Properties
Larger crystals most commonly have the form of a square prism terminated by a low pyramid, the prism angle being nearly a right angle. The crystals are tetragonal in appearance, though actually orthorhombic. There are perfect cleavages parallel to the faces of the prism. The mineral also often occurs in compact fibrous aggregates, the fibers having a divergent or radial arrangement. Natrolite is readily distinguished from other fibrous zeolites by its optical characteristics.

Between crossed the fibers extinguish parallel to their length, and they do not show an optic figure in convergent polarized light. Natrolite is usually white or colorless, but sometimes reddish or yellowish. The luster is vitreous, or, in finely fibrous specimens, silky.

The is 2.2, and the is 5.5. The mineral is readily fusible, melting in a candle-flame to which it imparts a yellow color owing to the presence of sodium. It is decomposed by hydrochloric acid with separation of gelatinous .


Environment
Natrolite occurs with other zeolites in the amygdaloidal cavities of . It is also common in nepheline syenites.


Notable localities
Excellent specimens of diverging groups of white prismatic crystals are found in compact at the Puy-deMarman, Puy-de-Dôme, . Huge crystals have been found on the Kola Peninsula, Russia (30 cm by 13 cm). The walls of cavities in the basalt of the , in , are frequently encrusted with slender needles of natrolite, and similar material is found abundantly in the volcanic rocks (basalt and ) of Salesel, Aussig and several other places in the north of . Mont St. Hilaire, has produced large crystals associated with many rare minerals. The Bay of Fundy in , , , and have also produced excellent specimens.

Several varieties of natrolite have been distinguished: fargite is a red natrolite from in Perthshire; bergmannite or spreustein is an impure variety which has resulted by the alteration of other minerals, chiefly , in the of southern Norway.

Natrolite is one of the closely associated minerals with , a rare mineral with its type locality in San Benito County, California.

Natrolite forms opaque white spherical inclusions within nodules of translucent green prehnite from Wave Hill, Northern Territory, Australia.


Images
File:Zeolite-greenland hg.jpg|Natrolite from the plateau basalts in east Greenland File:Natrolite-61051.jpg|Colorless, radiating natrolite in zeolite pod File:Catapleiite, Natrolite-168971.jpg|Catapleiite and natrolite from Poudrette quarry, Québec, Canada File:Natrolite-Inesite-21148.jpg|Slender needles of natrolite are accented by deep pink inesites File:Natrolite-223955.jpg|Natrolite in spherical clusters inside protective pocket of volcanic rock File:Natrolite-Inesite-37029.jpg|Natrolite sprays of stark white crystals are shooting out from a of inesite


See also
  • Pressure-induced hydration


External links


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