Types of twinning
Simple twinning
can result to contact twins or penetration twins.
i.
Contact twins
share the same composition surface and often appear as mirror images across the
boundary. Plagioclase, quartz, gypsum,
calcite and spinel often exhibit contact twinning.
(a)
(b)
(a)
(b)
If several parts of a twin crystal are aligned by
the same twin law, they are referred to as multiple
or repeated twins. Multiple twins can either be polysynthetic or cyclic.
(a)
(b)
(b) Cyclic
twinning: Here, the multiple twins are not
parallel but have polygonal shapes.
Rutile, aragonite and chrysoberyl often show such twinning.
(a)
(b)
Figure 44: other
types of twinning: Brazil, Dauphine, Japanese twins in quartz and Elbow twin in
rutile (respectively)
(For Sources, view the post titled Bibliography)
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