Fayalite

Crystal system · Orthorhombic

Fayalite is a silicate mineral recognized among collectors for its crystal form and distribution, with known Chinese sources.

Fayalite specimen
Photo: Fred Kruijen · CC BY-SA 3.0 nl via Wikimedia Commons

About Fayaliteextended article

Crystal Structure
Fe end-member of olivine.
Elemental Composition (by mass)
ElementMass %Visual
Fe Iron54.81%
O Oxygen31.41%
Si Silicon13.78%
Computed from simplified end-member formula. Solid-solution series, water content, and trace substitutions cause real-world variation.
IMA Abbreviation (Whitney-Evans 2010)
Fa
→ Fayalite
Fe end-member
Standard symbol from American Mineralogist (Whitney & Evans, 2010). Used in thin-section labeling, phase diagrams, and IMA-style species records.
Pronunciation
/ˈfaɪəlaɪt/
FY-uh-lite
for Fayal Island, Azores
Magnetism
Category:
weakly paramagnetic
Test result:
Strongest olivine response
Fe-end member of olivine.
Test with rare-earth magnet (N42 or N52 neodymium). Suspend specimen on thread for sensitive paramagnetic detection. Diamagnetic minerals are weakly repelled (visible only with strong magnets like bismuth).
Mohs 6.5–7
Vickers (~) 1400 HV
Knoop (~) 1100 HK
Geological setting
VolcanicPlutonic igneous
Element composition by mass

Formula: Fe₂SiO₄ · molar mass: 203.77 g/mol

Fe 54.81%
O 31.41%
Si 13.78%

Computed from atomic weights (IUPAC 2021). Site-occupancy groups (Fe,Mn) split equally.

GroupOlivine Group
Related members: Forsterite
Mohs Hardness 6.5–7

Fayalite sits at 6.5–7 on the Mohs scale — harder than glass; scratches steel.

Colors:
Streak
White
Crystal system
Orthorhombic
Type localityFayal Island, Azores, Portugal
Discovery First described 1840 by Christian Gottlob Gmelin (Portugal)
SilicatesSilicates (Nesosilicates)
TL;DR · 1 min read
Fayalite (Fe₂SiO₄) is the iron end-member of the olivine group, completing the forsterite-fayalite series. Its dark green to brown color comes from divalent iron substituting for magnesium.

Fayalite (Fe₂SiO₄) is the iron end-member of the olivine group, completing the forsterite-fayalite series. Its dark green to brown color comes from divalent iron substituting for magnesium. Fayalite-rich olivines occur in Fe-rich igneous rocks (gabbros, anorthosites) and fayalitic slags from historical iron smelting. The Faial Island (Azores) type-locality and lunar mare basalts are classic occurrences.

More minerals to explore

About Fayalite

Fayalite belongs to the silicate class in the olivine group and has the chemical formula Fe2SiO4. It crystallizes in the orthorhombic system and holds a steady position among silicate species.

Identification & care

Fayalite typically forms massive, granular; rarely tabular crystals. Its color is typically yellow-green, olive-green and yellowish brown to brown-black. The luster is vitreous, the streak is white, and specimens range from transparent to opaque. The cleavage is imperfect {010} and {100}. The fracture is conchoidal, which aids identification.

Collector context

Collector notes

For collectors, Fayalite is a benchmark crystalline species. Fayalite is widely represented across Chinese provinces, including Sichuan, Inner Mongolia, Fujian, Gansu.

Frequently asked questions

What is Fayalite?

Fayalite is a silicate mineral recognized among collectors for its crystal form and distribution, with known Chinese sources.

What is the chemical formula of Fayalite?

The chemical formula of Fayalite is Fe2SiO4.

What crystal system does Fayalite belong to?

Fayalite crystallises in the Orthorhombic crystal system.

References & databases

Mindat.org is the world’s largest open mineralogy database. Our descriptions are written independently and fact-checked.