SERPENTINE

 

Serpentine is a magnesium hydroxysilicate (Mg3Si2O5(OH)4).  It's a common mineral that occurs in three main forms (polymorphs): antigorite, chrysotile, and lizardite.  Serpentine is usually a metamorphic mineral - it forms from metamorphic alteration of olivine in the presence of water.  Olivine-rich igneous rocks, such as peridotites, are often expected to be partially or completely converted to serpentine-bearing rocks (serpentinites) in mountain belts.

 

Serpentine is typically mottled green, ranging from very pale green to black.  It has a nonmetallic luster, a hardness of 3 or 4 or 5, and often has a waxy luster & feel.  Chrysotile serpentine is often found in fibrous "veins" (asbestos) having a silky luster.

 

Antigorite serpentine (3.6 cm across) from northern Michigan, USA.

Geology: metamorphosed Deer Lake Peridotite, Ishpeming Greenstone Belt, late Neoarchean

Locality: Ropes Gold Mine, Marquette County, western Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA

 


 

Many serpentine-rich rocks have asbestos associated with them.  Asbestos is not a mineral - the term refers to fibrous forms of several different minerals.  “White asbestos” is chrysotile serpentine.  Other varieties include “blue asbestos” (= crocidolite amphibole) and “brown asbestos” (= amosite amphibole).

 

White asbestos was formerly used as a heat insulator, but the American government has since considered it to be a hazardous material.  So, asbestos removal has occurred throughout America in recent years.  Of the different varieties of asbestos, white asbestos (chrysotile) is the least hazardous (it slowly dissolves in lung fluids), but this was the most commonly used form in America.  The American government does not appear to acknowledge that different varieties of asbestos have different health risks, so all kinds are considered equally "bad".

 

Chrysotile serpentine (white asbestos) in the form of compacted, extremely thin, flexible fibers (3.0 cm across at its widest).  The whitish areas are the asbestos “veins”.  The dark matrix is serpentinite rock.

 


 

Prismatic chrysotile serpentine (16.3 cm across at its widest).  Not all occurrences of chrysotile serpentine are veins of thin, flexible fibers.  The sample shown above is prismatic, having moderately thick sticks of chrysotile.

Geology: metamorphosed Deer Lake Peridotite, Ishpeming Greenstone Belt, late Neoarchean

Locality: Ropes Gold Mine, Marquette County, western Upper Peninsula of Michigan, USA

 


 

  

Fibrous chrysotile serpentine (white asbestos) from a quarry in Northampton County, eastern Pennsylvania, USA (CM public display, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA).

 


 

Serpentinite (above & below) with “vein” of greenish chrysotile asbestos fibers from Asbestos, Canada.

 


 

Photo gallery of antigorite

Photo gallery of chrysotile

Photo gallery of lizardite

 


 

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