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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
PRECIOUS STONES
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and with borax melts with effervescence to a transparent glass. Color, white, pale blue, green, or red; purple, pink, and lavender are found in Massachusetts. Streak uncolored.
Serpentine is a deep green stone, very soft, and useless as a gem.
Smaragdite, a variety of hornblende, is of emerald-green, gray, and greenish-gray color. It is also found with pink and ruby corundum disseminated through it. Consists of silica, alumina, magnesia, lime, soda, ferrous, and other ox­ides. Hardness, 5.5; specific gravity, 3.12.
Sodalite is found in dodecahedrons, like lapis lazuli. Hardness, 6; specific gravity, 2.25 to 2.3. Composition: silica, 37.2; alumina, 31.7; soda, 19.1; sodium, 4.7; chlo­rine, 7.3. Color, gray, brown, violet to deep azure-blue. Found in Greenland, Vesuvius, and in the State of Maine.
Spodumene, or triphane, takes a high polish, but is diffi­cult to work, being harder in one direction than another, and of very easy cleavage. Crystallization monoclinic, in modi­fied oblique rhombic prisms. Hardness, 6.5 to 7; specific gravity, 3.1 to 3.19. Surface of cleavage pearly. The frag­ments in which it is usually found show two parallel cleavage planes. Translucent to subtranslucent. Composition: silica, alumina, lithia, and a small proportion of iron oxide and soda. Acids do not attack it, but it fuses before the blow-pipe to a transparent glass. Color, gray to greenish yellow. It is found in many localities in Europe and the United States, but transparent only in Brazil. Hiddenite is a variety of spodu­mene, containing about two per cent, more lithia.
Staurolites, or staurotide, from the Greek stauros, a cross. Crystallization trimetric, in right rhombic and six-sided prisms. Some of the crystals are cruciform, having twinnings, or two prisms crossing one another in the form of a cross. Hardness, 7 to 7.5; specific gravity, 3.65 to 3.73. Cleavage imperfect. Lustre vitreous to resinous; trans­parent to opaque. Color, reddish brown to black. Trans-
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Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels Page of 237 Ch. 21: Stones Seldom Used as Jewels
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