Andradite is a mineral species of the garnet group. It is a nesosilicate, with chemical formula Ca<sub>3</sub>Fe<sub>2</sub>Si<sub>3</sub>O<sub>12</sub>.
Andradite includes four varieties:
It was first described in 1868 for an occurrence in Drammen, Buskerud, Norway. Andradite was named after the Brazilian statesman, naturalist, professor and poet José Bonifácio de Andrada e Silva (1763âÂÂ1838).
It occurs in skarns developed in contact metamorphosed impure limestones or calcic igneous rocks; in chlorite schists and serpentinites and in alkalic igneous rocks (typically titaniferous). Associated minerals include vesuvianite, chlorite, epidote, spinel, calcite, dolomite and magnetite. It is found in Iran, Italy, the Ural Mountains of Russia, Arizona and California and in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast in Ukraine.
Like the other garnets, andradite crystallizes in the cubic space group Iad, with unit-cell parameter of 12.051 ÃÂ at 100 K.
The spin structure of andradite contains two mutually canted equivalent antiferromagnetic sublattices below the Néel temperature (T<sub>N</sub> = 11 K).