3.1" Tabular Quartz Crystal Floater Cluster - Arkansas

This is a beautiful tabular quartz floater cluster found in the Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas. Quartz from the Ouchaita Mountains has been known about ever since native Americans had first occupied the area and worked the quartz into projectiles for hunting and fishing, and has been commercially mined since the 1890's.

Silicon Dioxide, also know as SiO2 or Quartz, is the second most abundant mineral in the Earth's crust. Quartz crystals generally grow in silica-rich, hot watery solutions called hydrothermal environments, at temperatures between 100°C and 450°C, and usually under very high pressure. Quartz veins are formed when open fissures are filled with hot water during the closing stages of mountains forming, and can be hundreds of millions of years old.

A floater is a crystal that formed unattached to a matrix or host rock. Because they grow without an attachment point, usually all sides of floater crystals are undamaged.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Quartz
LOCATION
Ouachita Mountains, Arkansas
SIZE
3.1" cluster, Largest Crystal 3"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#30438