pseudominerals
Pseudominerals is an informal label used to describe natural solids that resemble minerals but do not meet the formal criteria for minerals. In mineralogical terms, a mineral is a naturally occurring, inorganic solid with a definite chemical composition and an ordered crystalline structure. Pseudominerals typically fail one or more of these criteria, most commonly because they lack long-range crystalline order (they are amorphous) or because their composition does not form a true crystal lattice. As a result, many such materials are classified as mineraloids rather than minerals.
Common examples cited in field guides and educational sources include opal and obsidian. Opal is a hydrated,
Identification and classification rely on assessing crystallinity and composition. Techniques such as X-ray diffraction determine whether
Pseudominerals thus illustrate the boundary between minerals and mineraloids and highlight the role of crystallinity in