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Ch. 23: Tourmaline

Ch. 23: Tourmaline Page of 252 Ch. 23: Tourmaline Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
lines called striae, and the prism may be more or less rounded by the addition of other planes.
If a doubly terminated crystal be examined carefully, it will be seen that the planes on the two ends are not alike, either in number or inclination. On one end there may be three planes, on the other six, or even twelve. If the planes on one end make a blunt termination, those on the other may make a sharply pointed one. Such a peculiarity of crystal form is possessed by but few minerals. Those possessing it are said to be hemimorphic, i. e., half formed. Some minerals, among which is tourmaline, which exhibit this peculiarity of form are often also pyroelectric, i. e., become electric on heating. It was this devel­opment of electricity which caused the stones with which the Dutch children played, to pick up ashes, etc., when the stones were warmed by the heat of the sun. Any one can repeat their observation by gently heating crystals, or even fragments of tourmaline, and applying them to bits of paper. The electrical attraction will often be found to be very strong, though it varies with different crystals. The fragments should not be overheated, the electricity being most strongly developed between 100° and 200° Fahrenheit.
In composition tourmaline is a complex silicate, chiefly of aluminum and boron. Iron, magnesium, the alkalies, and water also enter in vary­ing amounts into it. In fact, so complicated is its chemical nature that perhaps no other mineral has been so often analyzed or had its analyses so much discussed.
Ruskin, in his " Ethics of the Dust," thus describes the composition of tourmaline: "A little of everything; there's always flint and clay and magnesia in it; and the black is iron according to its fancy; and there's boracic acid, if you know what that is, and if you don't, I cannot tell you to-day, and it doesn't signify; and there's potash and soda; and on the whole, the chemistry of it is more like a mediaeval doctor's prescription than the making of a respectable mineral."
Tourmaline is both harder and heavier than quartz, its hardness being 7-7.5, and its specific gravity 2.98-3.20. It is thus sufficiently hard for use as a gem. It is, however, quite brittle, and even at times friable. Cracks therefore frequently cut across good crystals, and spoil what would otherwise make a good gem. It is very common to find tourmalines in the rocks broken into a number of pieces, and the frag­ments "mended" together with quartz or calcite. This has been true of the black tourmaline shown in the accompanying plate. Scarcely any other mineral exhibits this change so often as tourmaline, a result due probably to its brittleness and the character of the rock in which it occurs.
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Ch. 23: Tourmaline Page of 252 Ch. 23: Tourmaline
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