4.4" Purple Fluorite Crystals with Quartz - China

This specimen contains beautiful dodecahedral fluorite crystal aggregations, sitting atop a bed of pristine micro-quartz crystals. The majority of the fluorite crystals on this specimen are undamaged and translucent. Small purple phantoms can be seen when viewing the fluorite crystals from a perpendicular angle to the crystal's facet.

It comes with an acrylic display stand.

Fluorite is a halide mineral comprised of calcium and fluorine, CaF2. The word fluorite is from the Latin fluo-, which means "to flow". In 1852 fluorite gave its name to the phenomenon known as fluorescence, or the property of fluorite to glow a different color depending upon the bandwidth of the ultraviolet light it is exposed to. Fluorite occurs commonly in cubic, octahedral, and dodecahedral crystals in many different colors. These colors range from colorless and completely transparent to yellow, green, blue, purple, pink, or black. Purples and greens tend to be the most common colors seen, and colorless, pink, and black are the rarest.

Quartz is the name given to silicon dioxide (SiO2) and is the second most abundant mineral in the Earth's crust. Quartz crystals generally grow in silica-rich environments--usually igneous rocks or hydrothermal environments like geothermal waters--at temperatures between 100°C and 450°C, and usually under very high pressure. In either case, crystals will precipitate as temperatures cool, just as ice gradually forms when water freezes. Quartz veins are formed when open fissures are filled with hot water during the closing stages of mountain formation: these veins can be hundreds of millions of years old.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Fluorite & Quartz
LOCATION
Wuyi County, Zhejiang, China
SIZE
4.4" long, 2.8" wide
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#98766