Sewardite is
orthorhombic, which means that it contains three axes of unequal length,
a,
b, and
c, which are all at 90° to one another. Its class structure is
mmm (
2/m 2/m 2/m) – dipyramidal. Sewardite can form platy-to-compact anhedral-to-subhedral masses up to 0.3 mm in size. In terms of its optical properties, sewardite is weakly
anisotropic, which means the velocity of light varies depending on the direction through the mineral. Its color in plane-polarized light is dark red, and it does not exhibit
pleochroism, which means it does not appear to be a different color when observed at different angles under a polarizing
petrographic microscope. Sewardite illustrates weak
birefringence because it is weakly anisotropic. ==Occurrence==