fluorite is important because it is used in a lot of things like toothpaste.
What you say is true; fluorite is sometimes purple, and does appear in some geodes. I do, however, think that it would be rare to find a geode with purple fluorite
Fluorspar is a derivative of the word fluorite. Fluorite is the calcified and crystallized form of fluoride that is deep green in color.
No mineral resources are renewable on a human time scale.
The hardness of a steel nail is about 4.5 (About the same hardness of the mineral Fluorite.)
There are no reason that science is Not important. It is very important. Deal with it.
toothpaste
No, fluorite is not edible. It is a mineral that may contain impurities which could be harmful if ingested. It is important to only consume foods and substances that are known to be safe for consumption.
Fluorite is a mineral.
it is made out of fluorite
its is a rock
Fluorite is a mineral consisting of cubic crystals of calcium fluorite.
CaF2 Calcium fluorite. Fluorspar possibly.
Fluorite is a compound, CaF2.
Fluorite forms cubic crystals.
Fluorite is harder than feldspar, so scratching fluorite against feldspar would cause the fluorite to scratch the feldspar. This means the fluorite would leave a mark on the feldspar, showing that fluorite is harder than feldspar.
Yes, fluorite is harder than calcite. Fluorite has a hardness of 4 on the Mohs scale, while calcite has a hardness of 3. This means that fluorite can scratch calcite, but calcite cannot scratch fluorite.
No. Fluorite contains calcium and fluorine.