Muscovite is a sheet silicate
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From What I got I dont really know but if you got the work sheet key terms I would go with elements
The mineral mica is not a gemstone. It is not considered a precious mineral or gem. It is a valuable mineral that has a number of applications, and it is likely you have some mica in your home now. Mica is used in the electronics industry as an insulator beneath semiconductor packages when they are mounted on heat sinks in consumer (and other) electronic equipment.
Main ingredients, from the material safety data sheet, are: * 50%: Stoddard solvent (mineral spirits, somewhat similar to, but not the same as, kerosene) * 25%: Liquefied petroleum gas (presumably as a propellant, carbon dioxide is used now to reduce considerable flammability) * 15+%: Mineral oil (light lubricating oil) * 10-%: Inert ingredients No Fish oil in WD-40... Main ingredients, from the material safety data sheet, are: * 50%: Stoddard solvent (mineral spirits, somewhat similar to, but not the same as, kerosene) * 25%: Liquefied petroleum gas (presumably as a propellant, carbon dioxide is used now to reduce considerable flammability) * 15+%: Mineral oil (light lubricating oil) * 10-%: Inert ingredients
Muscovite is a sheet silicate
A structural type of silicate mineral in which flat sheets are formed by the sharing of three of the four oxygen atoms in each tetrahedron with neighboring tetrahedrons. Also known as layer silicate; sheet mineral; sheet silicate.
It is a mineral which can be pressed and used instead of glass.
Mica
A silicate sheet mineral like mica has one cleavage plane.
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Ice in the ice sheet that covers Antarctica is free of any minerals.
The ice sheet that covers 98% of Antarctica is 70% of the earth's store of fresh water, made up of oxygen and hydrogen. Neither of these is considered a mineral.
Mica minerals often appear in 'books' which are stacks of sheet-like mineral crystals.
Biotite is a sheet silicate mineral in the mica group. It is formed from the metamorphosis of sedimentary rock under heat and pressure.
where can i find a msds for american fare mineral oil
From What I got I dont really know but if you got the work sheet key terms I would go with elements