Glossary Category: Minerals & Geology

Collector-friendly mineral terms covering crystal forms, properties, formation settings, and chemistry basics. Great for accurate IDs, labeling, and comparing specimens.

Applying dilute acid to see if a mineral fizzes (effervesces), indicating carbonate content; commonly used to distinguish calcite and other carbonates from look‑alikes.
Fully fossilized tree resin that hardened through polymerization over millions of years.
A star-shaped light pattern (often 4 or 6 rays) produced by oriented inclusions; typically visible on cabochon-cut stones and used as a descriptive/valuing feature.
Layering produced during deposition; bedding style affects how rocks split and where fossils and textures are preserved.
The natural surface between sediment layers; bedding planes often split easily and preserve fossils or trackways.
Solid rock in place beneath soil and loose debris; collectors use bedrock exposures to confirm source rock and structures.
Double refraction where light splits into two rays, sometimes producing doubled edges through transparent crystals; an optical clue tied to crystal structure.
The process that binds sediment grains into rock; cementation affects hardness, weathering, and fossil release.
A moving ‘cat’s‑eye’ band of light caused by aligned fibers or needle-like inclusions; commonly seen on cabochons and used to describe gemstone appearance.
A fragment of pre-existing rock within a sedimentary deposit; clast type helps interpret source and transport.