Crystal Systems

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Crystal System Diagram Examples
Cubic

The cube is composed of 6 square faces
at 90° angles to each other. Each
face intersects one of the crystallographic
axes and is parallel to the other two.

Cubic.jpg Diamond

Garnet
Spinel

Tetragonal

The tetragonal system also has three axes
that all meet at 90°. It differs from the
isometric system in that the C axis is longer or
shorter than the A axes,
which are the same length.

Tetragonal.jpg Zircon
Hexagonal

In the hexagonal system, we have an additional axis,
giving the crystals six sides. Three of these
are equal in length and meet at 120° to each other.
The C or vertical axis is at 90° to the horizontal axes.
Mineralogists sometimes divide this into two systems,
the hexagonal and the trigonal, based on their external
appearance (see following).

Hexagonal.jpg Aquamarine

Beryl
Emerald
Heliodor
Morganite
Apatite

Trigonal

The trigonal system is a subsystem of the
hexagonal system according to some institutes,
therefore some gem references will list these as
hexagonal.

Trigonal.jpg Amethyst

Benitoite
Citrine
Corundum
Quartz
Ruby
Sapphire
Tourmaline

Orthorhombic

In this system, there are three axes all of which
meet at 90° to each other. However, all the axes
are of different length.

Orthorhombic.jpg Alexandrite

Andalusite
Chrysoberyl
Iolite
Peridot
Tanzanite
Topaz
Varisite

Monoclinic

The above crystal systems all have axes sides
that meet at 90°. In the monoclinic system, all
the axes are different lengths. The A axis is inclined
to the C axis. The B axis is at 90° to them.

You can imagine this as a matchbox that slants to one side.

Monoclinic.jpg Azurite

Diopside
Feldspar
Kunzite
Nephrite

Triclinic

In this system all the axes are different
lengths and none of them meet at 90°.

You can imagine this as a matchbox which slants to two sides.

Triclinic.jpg Turquoise


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