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PRECIOUS STONES.                               140
From the varied origin it will be seen that its associates may be almost any other known mineral.
Chemical Composition: Silicon dioxide, SiO2 Impure forms may contain clay, oxide of iron and many other sub­stances. Inclusions are common and will be referred to below. Although Quartz by itself is so infusible, it is readily fused when mixed with an alkaline carbonate, but this is a cbemical action and results in the forma­tion of an alkaline silicate (" water-glass ") which is soluble in water.
A. Pheno-Crystalline or Vitreous Varieties. 1. Bock Crystal is the ordinary colourless variety; it is always crystalline and often crystallised. The crystals are usually elongated, and of sizes varying from a small pin to several feet in length. Fresange records a crystal from Madagascar measuring 20 feet in circumference. Dauphine (Bourg d'Oisans) is famous for its groups of Bock Crystal (Fig. 12). The Alps generally have afforded fine specimens, and a notable group in the Museum at Naples may be mentioned. In 1719 a cavity was found at Zinken, in the Bernese Oberland, from which crystals weighing altogether 50 tons were taken, and sold for some ±'60,000, some of the crystals weighing up to 8 hundred­weight. In Upper Yalais, crystals were found in a cavity which were of extraordinary size, up to over half a ton in weight. The Carrara marble quarries have also afforded good specimens. A specimen in Paris, taken by the French in Italy in 1797, weighs 8 hundredweight and is 3 feet in diameter. The Caucasus, Siberia, Brazil, and particularly Japan, have produced fine specimens. In North America,