Smoky Quartz on Microcline
Sheep's Head Area, Colorado
This specimen measures 12cm x 21cm
Quartz SiO2
Silicates; Silicon dioxide
Color and Luster: White, colorless, and in various shades as follows: rockcrystal, transparent, colorless; amethyst, purple, rose quartz, pink, rose-red; citrine, clear yellow; smoky quartz, plae brown to black; milky quartz, milk white; aventurine, glistening with enclosed scales of mica or hematite; cat's eye, opalescent from inclusions of asbestos; and tigereye, with lusterous yellow to brown parallel fibers; vitreous, greasy luster; streak white
Hardness: 7
Cleavage: Generally none; rarely indistinct rhombohedral parting
Fracture: Conchoidal
Crystals: Hexagonal; usually prismatic crystals striated crosswise and frequently terminated by double rhomohedrons(like hexagonal pyramids); also granular, disseminated, massive
Orthoclase KAlSi3O8
Tectosilicate; potassium aluminum silicate, sometimes with considerable amounts of sodium
Color and Luster: White, pink, brown, gray, green, colorless, yellowish; vitreous, streak white
Hardness: 6-6.5
Cleavage: Good, two directions at 90°
Fracture: Uneven
Crystals: Monoclinic or triclinic; predominantly as single crystals of rectangular or square cross section and as tabular crystals; twin crystals very common; also cleavage masses, granular, disseminated grains
Note: Orthoclase, sanadine, adularia, and microcline are the potash feldspars
Andularia is often called moonstone, with a transparent or opalescent appearance
Sanadine is glassy
Microcline is white to pale yellow, rarely red, and when bright green it is called amazonite
Photo by Mary Sutherland
Descriptions taken from
The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Rocks and Minerals