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Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels

Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels Page of 237 Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
170            PRECIOUS STONES
acid, 21.3; water, 5.7. Translucent to opaque. Hardness, 5 to 5.5; specific gravity, 2.9 to 3. Color, white, creamy, and flesh-colored.
Dioptase is a brilliant green silicate of copper found as rhombohedral crystals and hexagonal prisms in the cavities of mahogany ore. Lustre vitreous; transparent to nearly opaque. Hardness, 4.5 ; specific gravity, 3.28. It is too soft for use as a gem.
Elseolite is named from elaion, oil, and is a variety of nepheline. It is found in Norway, Siberia, Arkansas, and Maine, in dingy, subtranslucent, cleavable masses. Lustre vitreous to greasy. Hardness, 5.5 to 6; specific gravity, 2.4 to 2.65. Composition: silica, 43.4; alumina, 33.5, with soda, potash, peroxide of iron, lime, and water. Color, bluish.
Enstatite and bronzite are found in Pennsylvania and Maryland. If cut across the fibre, they show a cat's-eye effect, but none have been found sufficiently fine to cut for gems. Color, dark green or greenish brown, with a lustre like bronze.
Epidote, of which zoisite and thulite are varieties, is a translucent to opaque stone, transparent only in very small crystals. Crystallization monoclinic, in right rhomboidal prisms, often with six or more sides. Hardness, 6 to 7; speĀ­cific gravity, 3.3 to 3.4. Lustre vitreous to pearly. Cleavage parallel to side planes. Refraction double. Composition varies considerably in proportions of silica, alumina, lime, and ferric oxide, mainly. It is attacked by acids, and slightly affected by the blow-pipe. The usual color is pistachio-green; it also ocurs in gray to grayish green, and blue with brownish and reddish modifications. It is found in Europe, Brazil, and the United States. Magnesian epidote contains fourteen per cent, of oxide of manganese.
Euclase is a rare mineral, which has, however, been cut and polished. Crystallization trimetric, in prismatic crystals
Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels Page of 237 Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels
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