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  2. Phenocryst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenocryst

    A phenocryst is an early forming, relatively large and usually conspicuous crystal distinctly larger than the grains of the rock groundmass of an igneous rock. Such rocks that have a distinct difference in the size of the crystals are called porphyries, and the adjective porphyritic is used to describe them.

  3. Phenakite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phenakite

    Phenakite or phenacite is a fairly rare nesosilicate mineral consisting of beryllium orthosilicate, Be 2 Si O 4.Occasionally used as a gemstone, phenakite occurs as isolated crystals, which are rhombohedral with parallel-faced hemihedrism, and are either lenticular or prismatic in habit: the lenticular habit is determined by the development of faces of several obtuse rhombohedra and the ...

  4. Llanite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Llanite

    The brown, fine-grained groundmass consists of very small quartz, feldspar, and biotite mica crystals. Llanite comes from a hypabyssal porphyritic rhyolite dike that intrudes Precambrian metamorphics in the Llano Uplift of central Texas. Published radiometric dating on this llanite indicates that it is 1.106 billion years old (late ...

  5. Porphyritic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porphyritic

    The large grain in the middle is of a much different size class than the small needle-like crystals around it. Scale box in millimeters. Porphyritic is an adjective used in geology to describe igneous rocks with a distinct difference in the size of mineral crystals, with the larger crystals known as phenocrysts.

  6. Photosynthetic reaction centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photosynthetic_reaction_centre

    This was also significant for being the first 3D crystal structure of any membrane protein complex. Four different subunits were found to be important for the function of the photosynthetic reaction center. The L and M subunits, shown in blue and purple in the image of the structure, both span the lipid bilayer of the plasma membrane.

  7. Heliotrope (mineral) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heliotrope_(mineral)

    A rough specimen of bloodstone. Heliotropes (from Ancient Greek ἥλιος (hḗlios) 'sun' and τρέπειν (trépein) 'to turn') (also called ematille, Indian bloodstones, or simply bloodstones) are aggregate minerals, and cryptocrystalline mixture of quartz that occurs mostly as jasper or sometimes as chalcedony (translucent).

  8. Spherulite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherulite

    Under the microscope the spherulites are of circular outline and are composed of thin divergent fibers that are crystalline as verified with polarized light. Between crossed Nicols, a black cross appears in the spherulite; its axes are usually perpendicular to one another and parallel to the crosshairs; as the microscope stage is rotated the cross remains steady; between the black arms there ...

  9. Chlorophane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorophane

    Crystal class: Hexoctahedral (m 3 m) H–M symbol: (4/m 3 2/m) Space group: Fm 3 m (No. 225) Unit cell: a = 5.4626 Å; Z = 4: Identification; Color: White, reddish pink or red (fluorescence/ phosphorescence in emerald green) Crystal habit: Well-formed coarse sized crystals; also nodular, botryoidal, rarely columnar or fibrous; granular, massive ...