sylicate
Chalcedony is a mineral that belongs to the silicate mineral group. It is composed of silicon dioxide, making it a silicate mineral.
Chalcedony is a cryptocrystalline form of silica, composed of very fine intergrowths of quartz and moganite. These are both silicate minerals.
It is a silicate. For sure.
Agate is a variety of silicon dioxide (SiO2); it is not a silicate.
Flourite is a non-silicate
Yes, chrysoprase is a type of chalcedony mineral consisting of silica. It is considered a silicate mineral due to its composition of silicon and oxygen atoms.
Yes, sardonyx is a form of chalcedony, which is a type of silica mineral. This makes sardonyx a silicate mineral due to its composition of silicon and oxygen atoms.
Agate is a variety of silicon dioxide (SiO2); it is not a silicate.
Yes
Lithium is a non-silicate mineral. It is typically found in minerals such as spodumene, lepidolite, and petalite, which belong to the silicate mineral group.
Gold is an element and as it does not contain any silicon it is therefore a non silicate.
Pyrite is a non-silicate mineral. It is a sulfide mineral composed of iron and sulfur, not containing silicon and oxygen as found in silicate minerals.