
Quartz:
Optical properties:
Uniaxial positive; first order interference colors (gray to
pale yellow); undulant extinction; clear in plane polarized light; conchoidal
fracture; no visible cleavage or twinning. In intrusive rocks, quartz is
typically a late-forming mineral and therefore interstitial to other minerals.
The photos on this page are under crossed polarizers: on the left above
is strained quartz in a granite; on the right is a quartz phenocryst in
rhyolitic glass, showing conchoidal fracture. The photos below show quartz
grains in a sedimentary rock, conglomerate. On
the left, Boehm lamellae in the grains indicate a high stress regime; the
grains on the right show sutured grain boundaries and internal strain, indicating
a probable metamorphic origin.
Occurrence:
Many intrusive rocks, such as granite, quartz monzonite, granodiorite,
tonalite, etc; extrusive rocks such as rhyolite, dacite, etc., and many
metamorphic and sedimentary rocks.


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