Crystal System Explorer
Explore the 7 crystal systems with interactive 3D-style visualizations. Learn about symmetry elements, axes, angles, and which minerals crystallize in each system.
EducationAxes
Angles
Symmetry
Example Minerals
How to Use
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1
Select a crystal system to explore
Choose from the seven crystal systems: cubic, tetragonal, orthorhombic, hexagonal, trigonal, monoclinic, or triclinic. Each system page displays the characteristic axial lengths, interaxial angles, and symmetry elements that define membership in that system.
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2
Examine symmetry elements and mineral examples
Review the rotation axes, mirror planes, and inversion centers that distinguish each system. The tool links symmetry elements to representative mineral species—pyrite and halite for cubic, zircon for tetragonal, topaz for orthorhombic, calcite for trigonal—so you can recognize real crystal forms.
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3
Compare crystal habit across related systems
Use the comparison view to see how axial distortion transforms cubic symmetry into tetragonal and then orthorhombic, or how hexagonal and trigonal systems share a common c-axis orientation but differ in rotational symmetry order. This comparative view reveals why certain crystal forms recur across multiple systems.
About
Crystal systems are the seven fundamental symmetry frameworks that classify all crystalline solids based on the geometric relationships between their unit cell axes and angles. Proposed in their modern form through the work of August Bravais, who in 1848 identified the 14 unique lattice types (Bravais lattices) distributed among the seven systems, this classification remains the foundation of structural crystallography and mineralogy.
The distribution of minerals among the seven systems reflects thermodynamic stability at Earth’s surface. The cubic system—with its maximum symmetry—hosts many economically important minerals: halite, pyrite, galena, magnetite, garnet, fluorite, and diamond all belong to cubic space groups. The monoclinic system is the most populous in terms of mineral species count, hosting hornblende, augite, gypsum, orthoclase, and many sheet silicates whose layered structures favor the lower symmetry of two equal axes at an oblique angle. Triclinic, with the lowest possible symmetry, contains plagioclase feldspars—by far the most abundant mineral group in Earth’s crust.
X-ray powder diffraction, developed independently by Peter Debye and Paul Scherrer in 1916 and by Albert Hull in 1917, transformed crystal system determination from a visual habit-based exercise into a precise measurement of lattice parameters from diffraction peak positions. The Cambridge Structural Database and American Mineralogist Crystal Structure Database now archive unit cell parameters for over 100,000 mineral and inorganic crystal structures, providing reference data that allows automated crystal system assignment from diffraction pattern matching.