Also appears in:
Everett's word list,
one
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Rocks and Minerals
created 9/22/2008
: last updated 9/25/2008
by Dean S.
Collecting Rocks and Minerals is a great hobby.
Definitions are from http://www.conservapedia.com
adamantine
Also appears in:
gruntle, opaque, glaucous, grumble, enclosure,
skulk, malinger, arrogance
amalgam
Also appears in:
GMAT Vocabulary A-D,
GRE Barron's Part 1,
GRE High Frequency Words,
GRE High Frequency Words_ltd
amethyst
http://www.conservapedia.com/Amethyst Amethyst is a variety of transparent quartz, used as a gemstone in jewelry. It is a deep clear violet or purple color, and has a hardness rating of 7 on the Moh's Scale.
Also appears in:
Vocabulary from Spelling Bee (C)
biotite
http://www.conservapedia.com/Biotite Biotite is a common rock-forming mineral of the mica family. Biotite is a black or dark brown silicate rich in iron, magnesium, potassium, aluminum, and, of course, silica.
crystal
http://www.conservapedia.com/Crystal A crystal is a substance in which the constituent atoms are arranged in a consistent, repetitive, and therefore orderly pattern. Crystals are extremely common, forming the basis for many rocks and minerals.
Also appears in:
list1
diamond
http://www.conservapedia.com/Diamond Diamond is an allotrope of carbon, and can be formed when carbon atoms are arranged in a tetrahedral fashion when put under immense amounts of heat and pressure.
Also appears in:
Conservapedia
feldspar
http://www.conservapedia.com/Feldspar Of all of the minerals in the Earth's crust, the aluminosilicate, feldspar, is the most common. It is a very useful industrial mineral that finds applications in making glass, plumbing fixtures, tile and pottery. These uses in the United States accounted for about 630,000 ton of U.S. produced feldspar valued at about $27.4 million.
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