Quantcast

Ch. 23: Tourmaline

Ch. 23: Tourmaline Page of 252 Ch. 23: Tourmaline Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
As a rock-forming mineral it often occurs as long, slender prisms, fre­quently about the size of a darning-needle, and radiating in all directions. The only mineral for which it is likely to be mistaken in this form is hornblende. It can be distinguished from this in the following manner: On fusing the powdered mineral with a mixture of bisulphate of potash and fluor-spar (best done on a little loop of platinum wire) tourmaline will color the flame green, while hornblende will produce no coloration.
The black opaque crystals of tourmaline often reach a large size, some being known four feet in length. Both black and brown tourmaline are usually opaque, and hence have no value as gems. Tourmaline of other colors, however, is often transparent, and this is of gem value.
The gem tourmalines are to be found in only a few localities. They occur in Maine, Connecticut, and California in our own country, and also in Brazil, Russia, and Ceylon. The crystals are usually in the form of long, slender prisms, often having the peculiarity of being differ­ently colored in different portions. Thus a crystal may be green at one end and red at the other, and in cross-section may show a blue center, then a colorless zone, then one of red, and then one of green. Some of the crystals from Paris, Maine, change from white at one termi­nation to emerald green, then light green, then pink, and finally are colorless at the other termination. In some crystals again the red passes to blue, the blue to green, and the green to black.
Exactly what produces these differences of color is not known. It is known that black tourmaline has an excess of iron, the red and green an excess of sodium and lithium, and the yellow and brown an excess of magnesium in their composition. These same differences of composition characterize similar colors in portions of the same crystal as well as separate crystals. Hence the evidence is quite conclusive that the color in some way depends on the composition. Many transparent tourma­lines, while appearing of a uniform color when viewed in any one direction, exhibit different colors when viewed in different directions. Thus, one of the long, slender crystals may appear green when held lengthwise in front of the eye, but when looked at from the end appears brown. Again, some crystals appear perfectly transparent when viewed perpendicularly to the sides of the prism, but when viewed from the end are nearly opaque. This may be true even when the thickness is less in the latter direction. Both these properties are due to the arrange­ment of the molecules of tourmaline, which is such as to make the power of absorbing light different in different directions.
The form of crystals of tourmaline is usually that of a three-sided prism. The sides of the prism are usually marked by narrow parallel
112
Ch. 23: Tourmaline Page of 252 Ch. 23: Tourmaline
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page