fluorite
Minerals of the halide group have principal anions called halogens. Examples of halide minerals are fluorite, halite, chiolite, jarlite and lawrencite.
Fluorite is a mineral that typically occurs as a cubic crystal. It is used in metallurgy and is the principal source of fluorine.
its is a rock
Fluorite is not edible.
Fluorite is a mineral.
fluorite
No. It is a halide, specifically calcium fluoride.
Flourite is in a group of minerals known as halides.
Minerals of the halide group have principal anions called halogens. Examples of halide minerals are fluorite, halite, chiolite, jarlite and lawrencite.
Fluorite does not go with the others. It belongs to Halide minerals, while the others (quartz, feldspar, and hornblende) belong to Silicate family of minerals.
From a mineralogical perspective, fluorite is an evaporite mineral that contains one calcium ion and two fluorine ions. Calcium may also be substituted partially accounting for different colours of the mineral but it is usually purple.
Fluorite is a mineral that typically occurs as a cubic crystal. It is used in metallurgy and is the principal source of fluorine.
Fluorite (also called fluorspar) is a halide mineral composed of calcium fluoride, CaF2.The number of neutrons depends on how much mineral you have.One molecule of CaF2 has one calcium atom with either 20, 22, 23, 24, 26 or 28 neutrons and two Fluorine atoms each of which has 10 neutrons.So at least 30 neutrons in one molecule.Each 30 grams of fluorite has an Avogadro number of molecules (6.02214 × 1023). so 100 grams of fluorite has about 6 * 1026 neutrons
These are called the halide minerals . The most common contain fluoride and chloride. For example fluorite (CaF2, calcium fluoride) and halite (sodium chloride, NaCl) See link for more examples.
it is made out of fluorite
its is a rock