Botryoidal habit of gibbsite crystals. Gibbsite Locality: Xianghualing Mine (Hsianghualing Mine), Xianghualing Sn-polymetallic ore field, Linwu County, Chenzhou Prefecture, Hunan Province, China (Locality at mindat.org) Size: miniature, 5.1 x 4.4 x 1.6 cm Gibbsite Emplaced on a 3-dimensional crust are botryoidal aggregates of greenish-gray gibbsite, to .3 cm across.
Similar habits are reniform (kidney-shaped) and mammillary (breast-shaped or partial spheres).
Formation
Minerals take on a botryoidal habit when they form in an environment containing many nuclei, specks of sand, dust, or other particulate matter to serve as sources of crystal nucleation. Acicular or fibrous crystals grow outward from these “seeds” at the same or very similar rate, resulting in radial crystal growth. As these spheres grow, they can run into or overlap with others that are nearby, fusing together to form a botryoidal cluster. Since botryoidal growths are formed from many smaller crystals, botryoidal habit is usually independent of the specific crystal structure associated with any given mineral. This is how the habit can be observed in a variety of minerals that otherwise display distinct euhedral forms.
References
Klein, Cornelis and Cornelius S. Hurlbut, Jr.; 1985; Manual of Mineralogy; Wiley; 20th ed.; p 199; ISBN0-471-80580-7