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T

Mineral Species · Silicates

Talc

滑石

Mg₃Si₄O₁₀(OH)₂

Talc (Mg₃Si₄O₁₀(OH)₂) is the softest mineral on the Mohs scale (1) — defining the bottom of the hardness reference. Its greasy feel and white color are diagnostic. Talc forms by hydrothermal alteration of magnesium-rich rocks…

Crystal system

Monoclinic

Hardness

1

Specific gravity

2.75

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China is a defining locality for Talc · 滑石. See the Chinese collector page →

Talc (Mg₃Si₄O₁₀(OH)₂) is the softest mineral on the Mohs scale (1) — defining the bottom of the hardness reference. Its greasy feel and white color are diagnostic. Talc forms by hydrothermal alteration of magnesium-rich rocks (peridotite, dolomite). Massive talc (“steatite” or “soapstone”) has been carved since prehistory. Major industrial source for cosmetics, ceramics, paper.

Key Facts

  • Mohs hardness 1 — softest mineral, scratched by fingernail.
  • Monoclinic; perfect basal cleavage produces flexible flakes.
  • Greasy soapy feel diagnostic.
  • Forms by hydrothermal alteration of Mg-rich rocks.
  • Major industrial use: ceramics, paper coatings, cosmetics, soapstone carvings.

Notable Localities

Mariposa County (California, USA) and Vermont yield massive soapstone. Liaoning (China) supplies Chinese industrial talc. Pyrenees (France) is a historical source.

Found at these Localities

Available in our shop

Hand-selected Talc specimens, vetted for authenticity.

Specimens for this mineral are coming soon. Browse all Chinese specimens in the meantime.

Related Minerals

Chemistry and crystal-system companions of Talc.

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