to glow under a ultraviloet light
It means the mineral that scratches the other mineral is harder on the Mohs scale
An area rich in a certain mineral.
It means that there is a lot of the mineral deposits.
Simple, Mineral matter is the mineral content shown in soil assays. Minerals like CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) etal.
the color a mineral leaves on a white tile
fluoresence is not a factor. I had this same question and i got fluorescence as a correct answer
fluoresence is not a factor. I had this same question and i got fluorescence as a correct answer
differnce between fluoresence and phosphoresence
It means the mineral that scratches the other mineral is harder on the Mohs scale
An area rich in a certain mineral.
No, "felsite" is not a mineral. Perhaps you mean feldspar?
First of all there are 6 and they are.... Fluoresence magnetism Optical properties reactivity And sorry, but that is all i now
Assuming you mean calcite, it is a carbonate mineral.
An inorganic mineral does not contain any Carbon
Not exactly sure what you mean...do you mean "true or false: a given mineral can have varying densities?" If you do mean that, than the answer is true.
It means that there is a lot of the mineral deposits.
It depends on what you mean by mineral. A mineral is a 'wide range' term. The only one I know of is Alexandrite, but that is a color-changing mineral, not exactly blue all of the time.