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Acicular, in mineralogy, refers to a crystal habit composed of slender, needle-like crystals. Crystals with this habit tend to be fragile. Complete, undamaged acicular specimens are uncommon.
The term "acicular" derives from the Late Latin "acicula" meaning "little needle". Strictly speaking, the word refers to a growth habit that is slender and tapering to a point. Prismatic crystals are not acicular; however, colloquial usage has altered the commonly understood meaning of the word. When writing for mineralogical publications, authors should restrict their usage of "acicular" to crystals with the tapering growth habit.
To add to the confusion, some minerals are described with various morphological terms. For example, natrolite is often described as slender prismatic and millerite is often described as filiform or capillary.
Minerals with an acicular habit include mesolite, natrolite, malachite, gypsum, rutile, brochantite and bultfonteinite. Crystals of dimethyltryptamine have an acicular habit, but this substance is not regarded as a mineral by the International Mineralogical Association. An acicular phase of steel is bainite.
Some minerals like creedite form prismatic crystals that appear to be acicular, but are instead prismatic in a bladelike form; these can be told apart by the fact that all prismatic crystals are less sharp, sometimes are tipped with a pyramidal shape, and keep a standard cross-section shape with straight edges. Acicular crystals differ from fibrous crystals in their thickness; crystals with a fibrous habit are much thinner, sometimes to the point of being flexible like hair, while acicular crystals are thicker and rigid.
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Explore les lois constitutives dans la théorie de l'élasticité, la relation stress-déformation, les lois de Hooke, l'isotropie et les symétries matérielles.
vignette|Cristaux d'aragonite sur le plafond de la grotte Ravenska jama en Slovénie. En minéralogie, l'habitus est la morphologie caractéristique d'un cristal, c'est-à-dire le mode d'association le plus fréquent de ses formes cristallines. Par exemple, le diamant et la pyrite cristallisent tous deux dans le système cubique. Cependant, le diamant se présente habituellement sous la forme (habitus) d'octaèdres brillants, alors que la pyrite forme généralement des cubes aux faces striées, moins souvent des octaèdres.
La minéralogie est une science multidisciplinaire qui a pour objet les minéraux, leurs identifications, leurs caractérisations et descriptions, leurs analyses, leurs variétés et habitus, leurs classements, classifications et collections, leurs gîtologie, gisements et répartitions, leurs origines et leurs divers modes de formation, leurs usages par l'Homme, leurs intérêts pour la végétation ou la faune, leurs histoires dans l'univers des écrits ou discours savants ou des savoirs profanes ou traditionnels, le
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