Kieserite | |
Category: | Sulfate minerals |
Formula: | MgSO4·H2O |
Imasymbol: | Ksr[1] |
Strunz: | 7.CB.05 |
Dana: | 29.6.2.1 |
System: | Monoclinic |
Class: | Prismatic (2/m) (same H-M symbol) |
Symmetry: | C2/c |
Unit Cell: | a = 7.51 Å, b = 7.61 Å c = 6.92 Å; β = 116.17°; Z = 4 |
Color: | Colorless, grayish-white or yellowish |
Habit: | Massive, granular; rarely as pyramidal crystals |
Twinning: | Contact on, polysynthetic about [110] |
Cleavage: | and perfect |
Fracture: | Uneven |
Tenacity: | Fragile |
Mohs: | 3.5 |
Luster: | Vitreous to dull |
Streak: | White |
Diaphaneity: | Transparent to translucent |
Gravity: | 2.57 |
Opticalprop: | Biaxial (+) |
Refractive: | nα = 1.520 nβ = 1.533 nγ = 1.584 |
Birefringence: | δ = 0.064 |
2V: | 55° |
Dispersion: | r > v, moderate |
Solubility: | In water |
References: | [2] [3] [4] |
Kieserite, or magnesium sulfate monohydrate, is a hydrous magnesium sulfate mineral with formula (MgSO4·H2O).
It has a vitreous luster and it is colorless, grayish-white or yellowish. Its hardness is 3.5 and crystallizes in the monoclinic crystal system. Gunningite is the zinc member of the kieserite group of minerals.[5]
It is named after Dietrich Georg von Kieser (Jena, Germany 1862).
Kieserite commonly occurs in marine evaporites and rarely in volcanic environments as a sublimate. It occurs in association with halite, carnallite, polyhalite, anhydrite, boracite, sulfoborite, leonite, epsomite and celestine.[4]
In early 2005, Mars Express, a European Space Agency orbiter, discovered evidence of kieserite in patches of Valles Marineris (the largest canyon on Mars), along with gypsum and polyhydrated sulfates. This is direct evidence of Mars's watery past and augments similar discoveries made by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity in 2004.
Kieserite might also be a rock-forming mineral in the icy mantle of the outer three Galilean moons (Europa, Ganymede, Callisto). At pressures higher than 2.7 GPa, kieserite transforms to a triclinic crystal structure.[6]
It is used in the production of Epsom salt and as a fertilizer, the overall global annual usage in agriculture in the mid 1970s was 2.3 million tons.[7] Kieserite is also used for cleaning hard water deposits from tiles, stones, and other pool and fountain lining materials. Due to its hardness, which is greater than hard water deposits but less than tiles and other water feature linings, it is blasted at the hard water deposits to remove them.
When used as a fertilizer, response to kieserite is likely where: