Cleavage is the cracks in rocks and the texture!
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.
The mineral sample displayed a distinct cleavage, breaking along smooth, flat planes.
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 angle of cleavage is the major information to identify where minerals are found.
Cleavage does not always mean nudity. cleavage between two hills was huge.
Halite is a cleavage because it splits evenly, but fracture would mean it breaks irregularly.
Halite is a cleavage because it splits evenly, but fracture would mean it breaks irregularly.
Sulfur's cleavage is imperfect.
That property is called cleavage or fracture, depending on how the mineral breaks.
Cleavage occurs naturally between the tissue of the two breasts. We think mostly of well-endowed females as having cleavage, but overweight boys and men can have cleavage too. The "lines of cleavage" are, as a simple description, the line between the clothing or bra and the exposed area of the breast and the "line" or separation between the breasts. So, if a woman wears an ill-fitting bra or one that is too small, the area of cleavage can be pronounced. In smaller bosoms, cleavage is less pronounced or noticeable.
the amount of skin you show with clothes
cleavage....
it has no cleavage
imperfect cleavage
it has no cleavage