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Ch. 46: Feldspar

Ch. 46: Feldspar Page of 252 Ch. 46: Feldspar Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
ever, when it occurs in large pieces which exhibit a play of colors that ' it is prized as an ornamental stone. The labradorite exhibiting the latter property in the most remarkable degree and hence most valued is that found on the coast of Labrador near Nain, and the adjacent Island of St. Paul. It was first found here by a Moravian missionary named Wolfe, and brought to Europe in the year 1775. It occurs together with hy-persthene, in a coarse-grained granite, or perhaps a gneiss. From these it is weathered out by wave and atmospheric action, and occurs as beach pebbles. It is also mined from veins. Labradorite of pleasing color and opalescence occurs in a few localities in Canada, and in Essex County, New York. Two localities occur in Russia, one near St. Petersburg, and the other in the region of Kiew. The labradorite of the latter locality is the better, its occurrence being in a coarse-grained gabbro. The Labrador occur­rence exceeds all others, however, in abundance and beauty, and by far the larger quantity used in the arts comes from there. The play of colors which gives labradorite its attractiveness is rarely seen to advan­tage except upon a polished surface, but whether polished or unpolished, it only appears when the surface is held at a particular angle with refer­ence to the eye. Emerson thus describes it in his essay on " Experience," " A man is like a bit of Labrador spar, which has no luster as you turn it in your hand, until you come to a particular angle; then it shows deep and beautiful colors."
The play of colors seen in labradorite is not like that of the opal, which presents to the eye fragments of different colors varying in differ­ent positions, but appears as broad surfaces of a single color. It is only rarely that these colors change with a change of position. The colors over any given surface are not usually alike, but more than two or three tints are rare. Each tint is uniform where it occurs, but a tinted surface may be interspersed with many spots exhibiting no sheen. Both colored and uncolored portions have only vague outlines, and merge into each other at the edges. Bauer mentions a labradorite from Russia the col­ored portions of which formed a striking likeness of Louis XVI., the head being a beautiful blue against a gold-green background, while above appears a beautiful garnet-red crown. Excellent effects are sometimes produced in labradorite by cutting it in the form of cameos so as to make the base of different color from the figure in relief. Because of its chatoyancy labradorite is sometimes known as " ox-eye," or " oeil-de-boeuf." Of the different colors shown by labradorite blue and green are most common, yellow and red least so. These colors are regarded by Vogelsang as of different origin, the blue being, in his opinion, a polariza­tion phenomenon due to the lamellar structure of the feldspar, and the
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Ch. 46: Feldspar Page of 252 Ch. 46: Feldspar
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