No
Cobalt has a cleavage in three directions, forming a cube.
No, not all minerals have cleavage. Cleavage is a property in which a mineral breaks along planes of weakness to form smooth surfaces. Some minerals exhibit cleavage, while others may fracture irregularly or have no cleavage at all.
Zinc exhibits a metallic cleavage, which means that it does not have a distinct cleavage plane like minerals. Instead, when subjected to stress, zinc will bend rather than break along a cleavage plane.
No, lodestone does not have cleavage because it is a naturally occurring magnetite mineral with a metallic luster and is typically massive, lacking any distinct cleavage planes.
The mineral sample displayed a distinct cleavage, breaking along smooth, flat planes.
so far scientist have not discovered its cleavage. So, far there is no cleavage. Which means the andwer is none
Cobalt has a cleavage in three directions, forming a cube.
Sulfur's cleavage is imperfect.
cleavage....
it has no cleavage
imperfect cleavage
it has no cleavage
What cleavage does pyrite have
cleavage
No it has cleavage and it's cleavage is "absent".
It has both cleavage and fracture.
the cleavage of the diamond is nothing