Crystalline Growth: Crystal Habits
Crystal Habit
The term "crystal habit" is used to categorize the appearance, shape, and size of a crystal, and identify its unique growth characteristics that result from its crystalline structure and growth environment.
Describing a mineral's crystal habit is useful in communicating what a certain specimen would, or should look like. There are approximately thirty-six standardized terms to describe the variations, or habits of a crystal's growth. A particular mineral may exhibit several different habits, all of which are influenced by the following factors:
- 1. Crystal Twinning ( two individual crystals share some of the same crystal lattice points)
- 2. Growth Conditions (heat, pressure, and space)
- 3. Trace Impurities (present during crystal formation)
Most gemstone crystals are not found as a perfectly formed single crystal, but are found as aggregates of several crystals that have grown together into a single mass. When one mineral replaces the void that is left behind from another mineral's disintegration, while preserving that original mineral's growth habit, it is referred to as a "pseudomorphous replacement."
Gemstones and their Crystal Habits
| Crystal Habit: | Habit Description: | Mineral: |
| Acicular | Needle-like, slender and/or tapered | Rutile (Quartz) |
| Anhedral | Poorly formed and distorted | Olivine |
| Banded | narrow bands of differing colors | Onyx |
| Bladed | Slender, flattened and blade-like | Tanzanite |
| Columnar | Long, slender prisms and parallel growth | Calcite |
| Dendritic | Tree-like multi-directional branching from central point | Opal |
| Dodecahedral | 12-sided Dodecahedron | Garnet |
| Drusy (Encrustation) | Aggregate of minute crystals coating a surface | Drusy (Quartz) |
| Enantiomorphic | Mirror-image (left/right) habit and optical characteristics | Citrine, Amethyst |
| Equant (Stubby) | Squashed, pinnacoids dominant over prisms | Zircon |
| Euhedral | Well-formed and Undistorted | Spinel |
| Foliated | Easily separated into plates | Mica |
| Geode | Rock cavities with internal crystals & encrustation | Amethyst, Quartz |
| Granular Mass | Anhedral crystals in lumpy mass with no crystal form | Peridot |
| Mamillary | Intersecting large rounded contours | Malachite |
| Massive | Shapeless with no distinct external crystal shape | Lapis Lazuli |
| Octahedral | Eight-sided octahedron - two pyramids, base to base | Diamond |
| Pincoid | Terminated by multiple pyramidal faces | Emerald, Beryl |
| Prismatic | Elongate and Prism-Like, all faces are parallel to c-axis | Tourmaline, Topaz |
| Pseudomorphous | Occurring in the shape of another mineral | Tiger's Eye |
| Striated | Surface growth lines parallel or perpendicular to c-axis | Alexandrite |
| Tabular (Lamellar) | Flat, tablet-shaped, prominent pinnacoid | Ruby |
Three variations of Acicular Rutilated Quartz Bladed Tanzanite (center) and Kyanite (right) Columnar Quartz (left), Smoky Quartz (center), and Basalt Rock (Yellowstone, Wyoming) Formations (right) Dendritic Agate (left), Opal (center), and Agate (right)
5. Dodecahedral Crystal Habit
Dodecahedral Garnet (center), Diamond Rough (right)
6. Drusy Crystal Habit
Three variations of Druzy Quartz
7. Enantiomorphic Crystal Habit
Enantiomorphic ("Japan Law" or "Left-Right" Twins) Quartz (center), Amethyst (right)
8. Equant Crystal Habit
Equant Zircon Roughs (center, and right)
9. Euhedral Crystal Habit
Euhedral (Octahedral) Red Spinel (center, and right)
10. Geode Crystal Habit
Uncut Geode (left), Amethyst Geode (center), and Quartz Geode (right)
11. Granular Mass Habit
Granular Mass Peridot (center), and Peridotite Encrustation (right)
12. Mamillary Crystal Habit
Mamillary Malachite (center), and Chalcedony (right)
13. Octahedral Crystal Habit
Octahedral White Spinel (center), Diamond Rough (right)
14. Pincoid Crystal Habit
Pincoid (Prismatic) Aquamarine (center), Emerald (right)
15. Striated Crystal Habit
Striated (Prismatic) Tourmaline (center), Striated Sapphire (right)
16. Tabular Crystal Habit
Tabular Calcite (center), Ruby (right) |
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