Everything about Chrysolite totally explained
The
mineral olivine (when gem-quality also called
peridot) is a
magnesium iron silicate with the formula (
Mg,
Fe)
2SiO4. It is one of the most common minerals on Earth, and has also been identified in
meteorites and on the
Moon,
Mars, and comet
Wild 2.
The ratio of magnesium and iron varies between the two
endmembers of the
solid solution series:
forsterite (Mg-endmember) and
fayalite (Fe-endmember). Compositions of olivine are commonly expressed as molar percentages of forsterite (Fo) and fayalite (Fa) (for example, Fo
70Fa
30). Forsterite has an unusually high melting temperature at atmospheric pressure, almost 1900°C, but the melting temperature of fayalite is much lower (about 1200°C). The melting temperature varies smoothly between the two endmembers, as do other properties. Olivine incorporates only minor amounts of elements other than
oxygen,
silicon,
magnesium, and
iron.
Manganese and
nickel commonly are the additional elements present in highest concentrations.
Olivine gives its name to the group of minerals with a related structure (the
olivine group) which includes
tephroite (
Mn2SiO
4),
monticellite (
CaMgSiO
4), and
kirschsteinite (CaFeSiO
4).
Identification and paragenesis
Olivine is usually named for its typically olive-green color (thought to be a result of traces of
nickel), though it may alter to a reddish color from the oxidation of iron. It has a
conchoidal fracture and is rather
brittle. The
hardness of olivine is 6.5–7, its
relative density is 3.27–3.37, and it has a
vitreous luster. It is transparent to translucent.
Transparent olivine is sometimes used as a
gemstone called
peridot, the
French word for olivine. It is also called chrysolite, from the
Greek words for
gold and stone. Some of the finest gem-quality olivine has been obtained from a body of
mantle rocks on
Zabargad island in the
Red Sea.
Olivine/peridot occurs in both
mafic and
ultramafic igneous rocks and as a primary mineral in certain
metamorphic rocks. Mg-rich olivine crystallizes from
magma that's rich in magnesium and low in
silica. That magma crystallizes to
mafic rocks such as
gabbro and
basalt.
Ultramafic rocks such as
peridotite, and
dunite can be residues left after extraction of magmas, and typically they're more enriched in olivine after extraction of partial melts. Olivine and high pressure structural variants constitute over 50% of the Earth's upper mantle, and olivine is one of the Earth's most common minerals by volume. The
metamorphism of impure
dolomite or other
sedimentary rocks with high magnesium and low silica content also produces Mg-rich olivine, or forsterite.
Fe-rich olivine is relatively much less common, but it occurs in
igneous rocks in small amounts in rare
granites and
rhyolites, and extremely Fe-rich olivine can exist stably with
quartz and
tridymite. In contrast, Mg-rich olivine doesn't occur stably with
silica minerals, as it would react with them to form
orthopyroxene ((Mg,Fe)
2Si
2O
6).
Mg-rich olivine is stable to pressures equivalent to a depth of about 410 km within Earth. Because it's thought to be the most abundant mineral in Earth’s mantle at shallower depths, the properties of olivine have a dominant influence upon the
rheology of that part of Earth and hence upon the solid flow that drives
plate tectonics. Experiments have documented that olivine at high pressures (for example, 12
GPa, the pressure at depths of 360 kilometers or so) can contain at least as much as about 8900 parts per million (weight) of water, and that such water contents drastically reduce the resistance of olivine to solid flow; moreover, because olivine is so abundant, more water may be dissolved in olivine of the mantle than contained in Earth’s oceans.
Mg-rich olivine has also been discovered in
meteorites, on Mars, and on Earth's
moon. Such meteorites include
chondrites, collections of debris from the early solar system, and
pallasites, mixes of iron-nickel and olivine. The spectral signature of olivine has been seen in the dust disks around young stars. The tails of comets (which formed from the dust disk around the young
Sun) often have the spectral signature of olivine, and the presence of olivine has recently been verified in samples of a comet from the
Stardust spacecraft.
Crystal structure
Minerals in the olivine group crystallize in the
orthorhombic system (
space group P
bnm) with isolated silicate tetrahedra, meaning that olivine is a
nesosilicate. In an alternative view, the atomic structure can be described as a hexagonal, close-packed array of oxygen
ions with half of the octahedral sites occupied with magnesium or iron ions and one-eighth of the tetrahedral sites occupied by silicon ions.
There are three distinct oxygen sites (marked O1, O2, and O3 in figure 1), two distinct metal sites (M1 and M2), and only one distinct silicon site. O1, O2, M2, and Si all lie on
mirror planes, while M1 exists on an inversion center. O3 lies in a general position.
High pressure polymorphs
At the high temperatures and pressures found at depth within the Earth the olivine structure is no longer stable. Below depths of about 410 km olivine undergoes a
phase transition to the
sorosilicate,
wadsleyite and, at about 520 km depth, wadsleyite transforms into
ringwoodite, which has the
spinel structure. These phase transitions lead to a discontinuous increase in the density of the Earth's
mantle that can be observed by
seismic methods.
The pressure at which these phase transitions occur depends on temperature and iron content (Deer et al. 1992). At 800°C the pure magnesium end member, forsterite, transforms to wadsleyite at 11.8
gigapascals (118 kbar) and to ringwoodite at pressures above 14 GPa (140 kbar). Increasing the iron content decreases the pressure of the phase transition and narrows the
wadsleyite stability field. At about 0.8
mole fraction fayalite, olivine transforms directly to ringwoodite over the pressure range 10–11.5 GPa (100–115 kbar). Fayalite transforms to Fe
2SiO
4 spinel at pressures below 5 GPa (50 kbar). Increasing the temperature increases the pressure of these phase transitions.
Historical and mythical uses
The
Septuagint names
chrysolithos as a stone on the
Hoshen in the verse
Exodus 28:20; the
masoretic text has the word
tarshish, which has uncertain meaning, in the same place. According to the
New International Version and
Rebbenu Bachya, the word
tarshish refers to chrysolite (olivine) and Rebbenu Bachya claims it was the stone representing the tribe of
Asher. However, Chrysolite took its modern meaning much more recently, and in Greek times just meant
golden stone (
chryso-lithos), and could refer not only to yellowish olivine, but also to
Topaz,
Amber, yellow
Jasper, yellow
Serpentine, or even
lapis lazuli which has golden flecks within its mainly blue surface and fits with the
targum descriptions of the
tarshish stone as being sea-colored.
Tarshish probably refers to
Tarshish, a place, though this doesn't identify the stone much more. In the Biblical account, there's a stone, on an earlier row, that scholars think was translucent and yellow, so scholars think that
chrysolithos/
tarshish here's unlikely to refer to olivine, because that would place two translucent stones next to each other, and be quite jarring; instead scholars favour yellow Jasper or Serpentine. There is a wide range of views among traditional sources about which tribe the stone refers to.
Uses
A worldwide search is on for cheap processes to sequester CO
2 by mineral reactions. Removal by reactions with olivine is an attractive option, because it's widely available and reacts easily with the (acid) CO
2 from the atmosphere. When olivine is crushed, it weathers completely within a few years, depending on the grain size. All the CO
2 that's produced by burning 1 liter of oil can be sequestered by less than 1 liter of olivine. The reaction is exothermic but slow. In order to recover the heat produced by the reaction to produce electricity, a large volume of olivine must be thermally well isolated. Then it can produce power, while at the same time removing CO
2. The end-products of the reaction are silicon dioxide, magnesium carbonate and small amounts of iron oxide.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Chrysolite'.
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