Spinel

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Spinel

General
Category Mineral
Chemical formula MgAl2O4
Identification
Color Various, red to blue to mauve. Dark green, brown. Black
Crystal habit Cubic, octahedral
Crystal system Isometric
Cleavage Indistinct
Fracture Conchoidal, uneven
Mohs Scale hardness 8.0
Luster Vitreous
Refractive index 1.712-1.762
Pleochroism Absent
Streak White
Specific gravity 3.54-3.63

The spinels are any of a class of minerals which crystallize in the isometric system with an octahedral habit. The general formula is as (X)(Y)2O4, with X representing cations occupying tetrahedral sites and Y cations occupying octahedral sites. Divalent, trivalent, and quadrivalent cations can occupy the X and Y sites, and they include magnesium, zinc, iron, manganese, aluminium, chromium, titanium, and silicon.

The oxygen anions are arranged in a cubic close-packed structure. In the normal spinel structure, X cations occupy the tetrahedral sites, and Y the octahedral sites. For inverse spinels, half the Y cations occupy the tetrahedral sites, and both X and Y cations occupy the octahedral sites.

The Samarian Spinel is the largest known 500 carat spinel in the world.

Important members of the spinel group include:

True spinel has long been found in the gemstone-bearing gravel of Sri Lanka and in limestones of Myanmar and Thailand.

Spinel crystallizes in the isometric system; common crystal forms are octahedrons, usually twinned. It has an imperfect octahedral cleavage and a conchoidal fracture. Its hardness is 8, its specific gravity is 3.5-4.1 and it is transparent to opaque with a vitreous to dull lustre. It may be colorless, but is usually various shades of red, blue, green, yellow, brown or black. There is a unique natural white spinel, now lost, that surfaced briefly in what is now Sri Lanka. Another famous spinel is the Black Prince's Ruby in the British Crown Jewels.

The transparent red spinels are called spinel-rubies or balas-rubies and were often confused with actual rubies in ancient times. "Balas" is derived from Balascia, the ancient name for Badakhshan, a region in central Asia situated in the upper valley of the Kokcha river, one of the principal tributaries of the Oxus river.

Spinel is found as a metamorphic mineral, and also as a primary mineral in rare mafic igneous rocks; in these igneous rocks, the magmas are relatively deficient in alkalis relative to aluminum, and aluminium oxide may form as the mineral corundum or may combine with magnesia to form spinel. This is why spinel and ruby are often found together.

Spinel, (Mg,Fe)(Al,Cr)2O4, is common in peridotite in the uppermost Earth's mantle, between the Mohorovicic discontinuity (the Moho) and a depth of 70 kilometers or so; below that depth, the spinel (if present) becomes increasingly rich in chromium, as with increasing depth, pyrope-rich garnet becomes the more stable aluminous mineral in peridotite. At depths significantly shallower than the Moho, calcic plagioclase is the more stable aluminous mineral in peridotite.

Spinel, (Mg,Fe)Al2O4, is a common mineral in the Ca-Al-rich inclusions (CAIs) in some chondritic meteorites.

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