Name: |
rutile |
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Class: |
Oxide/Hydroxides |
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Chemistry: |
TiO2 Titanium Dioxide |
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Color(s): |
yellow to dark brown, reddish, black |
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Hardness: |
6.0 |
SpecGrav: |
4.2 - 4.3 |
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Fracture: |
conchoidal |
Cleavage: |
complete |
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Crystal: |
tetragonal (prismatic thick columns, sometimes fine wire-like structures in quartz or topaz, often vertical stripes) often twinned |
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Envronment: |
present in metamorphic rocks, pegmatites, basic magmatites. |
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Association: |
brookite, anatase, hematite, quartz, topaz, apatite, titanite |
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Locals: |
| Austria | Urals | Norway | Switzerland | Mexico | Brazil | Georgia /USA | |
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Misc: |
The name is from the Latin "rutilus", which means "golden-red". There are three polymorphs of Titanium Dioxide, rutile, anatase, and brookite. Rutile is by far the most common. It is an important ore of titanium. |
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