GT Zirkon
Family overview
- Ultra Light Italic
- Thin Italic
- Light Italic
- Book Italic
- Regular Italic
- Medium Italic
- Bold Italic
- Black Italic
- Ultra LightZircons from Jack Hills in the Narryer Gneiss Terrane, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia, have yielded U-Pb ages up to 4.404 billion years
- Ultra Light ItalicCommercially valuable minerals and rocks are referred to as industrial minerals.
- ThinSilicon and oxygen constitute approximately 75% of the Earth’s crust, which translates directly into the predominance of silicate minerals.
- Thin ItalicZirconium is a mineral belonging to the group of nesosilicates.
- LightZircon often contains traces of radioactive elements in its structure, which causes it to be metamict.
- Light ItalicRadioactive dating shows that the zircon crystals were formed more than 4 billion years ago.
- BookZirconium is a chemical element with symbol Zr and atomic number 40.
- Book ItalicThe name zircon is taken from the name of the mineral zircon, the most important source of zirconium.
- RegularThe name zircon is taken from the name of the mineral zircon, the most important source of zirconium.
- Regular ItalicCrystals are almost always terminated with a pyramidal termination, and may be doubly terminated, and occasionally entirely pyramidal resembling an octahedron.
- MediumScientists then studied the diamonds’ composition, looking specifically at their carbon isotopes.
- Medium ItalicRadioactive dating shows that the zircon crystals were formed more than 4 billion years ago.
- BoldRecent experiments, for example, have shown that crystals grow five times faster when their supersaturated solution is subjected to frequencies of 10 to 100 cycles a second.
- Bold ItalicManly P. Hall and other students of esoteric wisdom have also noted that many ancient crystals were produced by ‘zodiacal formulae’ grown at specific times, when the sun, moon and planets were in special heavenly positions.
- BlackChemical substitution and coordination polyhedra explain this common feature of minerals.
- Black ItalicSome rocks, such as limestone or quartzite, are composed primarily of one mineral—calcite or aragonite in the case of limestone, and quartz in the latter case.
- Settings
Typeface information
GT Zirkon is an extravagant sans serif workhorse. It blends the worlds of rational tool and ornamentation by applying techniques used to optimize type for small sizes in a refined way.
Typeface features
OpenType features enable smart typography. You can use these features in most Desktop applications, on the web, and in your mobile apps. Each typeface contains different features. Below are the most important features included in GT Zirkon’s fonts:
- SS01
- Alternate Arrows
Volume ↗
- SS02
- Alternate f
Refraction
- ONUM
- Oldstyle Figures
0123456789
- SMCP
- Small Caps
Ore Deposit
Typeface Minisite


- Visit the GT Zirkon minisite to discover more about the typeface family’s history and design concept.
GT Zirkon in use

