POTASSIUM FELDSPAR

(K-Feldspar) ("K-spar")

 

Feldspar is a group of common silicate minerals.  Feldspars are silicate minerals having one-fourth of all the silicons in SiO2 replaced by aluminum (Si4O8 to (Si3Al)O8).  When this happens, the (Si3Al)O8 has a -1 electric charge.  The charge is satisfied by the addition of one or more metals.  The (Si3Al)O8- structure has relatively large holes, and the only metals that tend to stay in these holes are: K (potassium), Na (sodium), Ca (calcium), Cs (cesium), Ba (barium), Sr (strontium), and Pb (lead).  Of these, K & Na & Ca are the most common metals that enter the matrix.  Sometimes, several different metals enter the structure, resulting in "garbage can minerals".

 

Chemical analyses of feldspars show that they range in composition from K-feldspar to Na-feldspar and from Na-feldspar to Ca-feldspar.  Mineralogists have thus established two "families" of feldspars.  There is no chemical gradient between K-feldspar and Ca-feldspar.

 

The potassium feldspars (K-feldspars) (aka alkali feldspars) are those that range in composition from pure K-feldspar to pure Na-feldspar (actually, feldspars with ~even & random mixes of potassium and sodium are rare).  The feldspars with Na and/or Ca are the plagioclase feldspars.  All feldspars have similar physical properties: a hardness of about 6, a whitish streak, and two cleavage planes at or very near 90º.  Potassium feldspar is whitish to pinkish-orangish to salmon-colored.

 

"Potassium feldspar" refers to a group of several different K-rich minerals: orthoclase, microcline, adularia, sanidine, and anorthoclase.  Orthoclase, microcline, and adularia have the chemical formula KAlSi3O8 - potassium aluminosilicate.  Sanidine and anorthoclase have the formula (K,Na)AlSi3O8.

 

Potassium feldspar - upper sample is 4.4 cm across; lower sample is 4.6 cm across.

 


 

Photo gallery of adularia           

Photo gallery of sanidine

Photo gallery of orthoclase        

Photo gallery of anorthoclase

Photo gallery of microcline

 


 

Amazonite (above & below; above: 3.9 cm across; below: 4.7 cm across) - amazonite is a distinctively green-colored K-feldspar.  Specifically, amazonite is green microcline.  It is known from several localities around the world.  Green orthoclase is also known, but is extremely rare - it is traditionally only known from the Broken Hill Block in New South Wales, Australia, but it's since been found elsewhere.  The coloration in green microcline (& green orthoclase) is due to lead impurity.

 


 

Amazonite (green) & smoky quartz (black) from the Crystal Peak area, Colorado, USA (Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum, Golden, Colorado, USA).

 


 

Photo gallery of amazonite

 


 

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