49 Rows |
 Afresite
I honestly don't know what this is (and neither does anybody else - I've asked)! I bought it from a mall "nature store" and as near as I can determine, it's very rare black beryl from Brazil. It's opaque, black, hexagonal, the same hardness as beryl, and in the right matrix to be beryl, so . . . | |
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 Benitoite
The state gem of California, benitoite is a rare barium titanium silicate with a beautiful sapphire-blue color and a greater dispersion than diamond! This one has some snow-white natrolite on it - it's from the type locality of the Dallas Gem Mine, San Benito County, California. Thanks to Mike Keim at Marin Minerals for the specimen and the closeup image! | | |
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 Benitoite
This is an odd benitoite thumbnail (also from the Dallas Mine) - its faces are etched; it's heavily included with crossite to the point of opacity; it's very fluorescent, and the closeup (larger image, top center) shows a tiny cluster of salmon-colored serandite crytsals! Thanks to Rick Kennedy's auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! | |
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Row 2 |
 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
This is a gorgeous pale aquamarine-mica group from the Huya Mine, Pingwu, Chengdu area, Sichuan Province, China. Thanks to Greg Bradbury at Crystalmaze for the specimen and the images! |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
This looks like goshenite (upper left - it's so clear and colorless it almost disappears) and has goshenite's typical tabular habit, but most of the beryl coming out of the Sichuan Province in China is considered aqua. The specimen was loaned to Dr. John Rakovan at Miami University of Ohio for photography and NDT studies. His findings - "what appears to be a spiral growth in the beryl (closeup image) is actually concentric zoning - since there's no color change or luminescence, the zoning is probably due to refractive differences brought on by compositional changes." The Chinese aquas generally ride on a muscovite matrix - this one has cassiterite crystals as well. Thanks to Greg Holland at the Stone Haven Mineral Shoppe for the specimen and the closeup image! | |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
An aquamarine from the Xue Bao Diang Mine, Pingwu, Chengdu area, Sichuan Province, China - again with goshenite's habit, on a muscovite matrix. Thanks to Peter J. Biskup's auction on eBay for the specimen! | -
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Row 3 |
 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
Three aquamarine crystals have grown together in this thumbnail from Afghanistan. Thanks to David Emslie's (Prospector's Gold & Gems) auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
This is a true gemstone pegmatite from Madagascar - a rose quartz matrix with a beautiful (mostly translucent, but lots of nice colors) aquamarine, a cluster of dark red spessartines, and on the back, the remnants (and cast) of a probable cassiterite (larger picture, lower right). |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
My jeweler friend says that these "frozen" aquamarines (and morganites) recently found in Minas Gerais, Brazil, may well be the next fashion trend - this one (28 ct) has a natural hole in it (larger image, right) for a chain. |
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Row 4 |
 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
This is a gemmy, terminated aquarmarine (38.7 cts) from the Erongo Mountains, Namibia. Thanks to Thomas Bee's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
Two facet-grade (15.58 tcw) aquas from . Thanks to Bernie Giloni's (GemsUSA) auction on eBay for the specimen! | |
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 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
An odd miniature of blue aquas that hug the matrix and one green aqua that doesn't - from the famous locale of Mount Antero, Colorado. Thanks to Roger Hoek's (ARCH Minerals) auction on eBay for the specimen and the image! | |
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Row 5 |
 Beryl, var. Aquamarine
A greenish aqua with unusual color diffusion from Minas Gerais, Brazil. Ex: Dan Erling Collection. Thanks to Tom & Vicki Loomis at Dakota Matrix Minerals for the specimen and the image! |
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 Beryl, var. Emerald
Russian emeralds often occur with dark green or black mica schist. The closeup shows the main emerald better - this one was tough to photograph! |
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 Beryl, var. Emerald
A waterworn emerald crystal in matrix from Hiddenite, Alexander County, North Carolina. Thanks to Kevin MacNelly's (Geodeland) auction on eBay for the specimen and the image! |
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Row 6 |
 Beryl, var. Emerald
This emerald's trying to be an aquamarine - these on a matrix of calcite and black limestone from Muzo, Columbia tend to be on the blue side. Thanks to Emilie & Ron Kendig's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Beryl, var. Emerald
A gorgeous gemmy emerald from the Coscuez Mine, Boyaca, Colombia. Thanks to Dan Kepler's auction on eBay for the specimen and images! | |
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 Beryl, var. Golden Beryl
A needle of yellow to yellow-orange transparent beryl from Minas Gerais in Brazil has an excellent termination and is free of matrix. Thanks to Chris Korpi at Pangaea Minerals for the specimen! |
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Row 7 |
 Beryl, var. Goshenite
There's muscovite on this tabular goshenite (the colorless variety of beryl) from Guizhou, China. The side view (large picture) shows the hexagonal form. The name goshenite comes from Goshen, MA where it was first found. It's often used as a diamond substitute. Thanks to Chris Korpi at Pangaea Minerals for the specimen! |
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 Beryl, var. Green Beryl
The translucent (or opaque) beryls usually are much larger than their gemmy counterparts - this green one (3 inches long) with blue translucent areas is probably from Maine. Thanks to Mike & Vickie Gerrie's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Beryl, var. Heliodor
Heliodor, the pale yellow to dark yellow-green variety of beryl, is not often used as jewelry. This one's got a cloudy termination and schorl inclusions (large photo) near the base and comes from the Zelatoya Vada Mine, near Rangkul, East of Murgab, Tajikistan. Thanks to Chris Korpi at Pangaea Minerals for the specimen! |
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Row 8 |
 Beryl, var. Heliodor
A beautiful gemmy heliodor from Nuristan, Afghanistan. The color is in between the two photos. Thanks to Walter Mroch's (The Gem and Mineral Exploration Company) auction for the specimen and the image! |
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 Beryl, var. Heliodor
A big sparkly etched heliodor from a gem pegmatite near Conselheiro Pena, Minas Gerais, Brazil. It has a couple of natural holes in it and in certain orientations looks like a chicken! Thanks to Eric Greene's (Treasure Mountain Mining) auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! | |
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 Beryl, var. Morganite
This beautiful chunk of morganite has been cut, beveled, and polished and has several clean areas that will cut two or three gemstones of 3 - 4 carats each. Thanks to Bob Drummond at Mountain Lily Gemsfor the specimen and the image! | |
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Row 9 |
 Beryl, var. Morganite
A beautiful etched morganite from Minas Gerais, Brazil. |
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 Beryl, var. Red Beryl
This red beryl is very rare and comes from the Violet Claims in Beaver County, Utah. The Violet Claims have recently (late 2001) been purchased by Tiffany's, so there may not be any more specimens from this locale. Thanks to Tom & Vicki Loomis at Dakota Matrix Minerals for the specimen and the image! | |
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 Beryl, var. Red Beryl
More red beryl from the Violet Claims in the Wah Wah Mountains of Utah. Thanks to David Emslie's (Prospector's Gold & Gems) auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 10 |
 Beryl, var. Red Beryl
The red beryl from the other U.S. location (Wildhorse Springs, Thomas Range, Juab County, Utah) has a different habit - rosettes of stacked, paper-thin crystals. These also predate the Violet Claims red beryls by several decades. Thanks to Rob Lavinsky at The Arkenstonefor the specimen! |
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 Brazilianite
One of the new (early 1999) batch of brazilianites - a nice yellowish-green color. It's the only phosphate that's hard enough to be a "real" gemstone - apatite (though it occurs in beautiful pastels and is often faceted for that reason) is a little too soft. |
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 Brazilianite
A crossed pair of light yellow brazilianites comprise this thumbnail from Linopolis, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Thanks to Adam Larson's (Adam's Minerals) auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 11 |
 Brazilianite
A greener than usual brazilianite thumbnail from Minas Gerais, Brazil - my camera insists on making it appear yellower (larger image, bottom) than it is. Thanks to John Fasana's auction on eBay for the specimen an d the images! |
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 Buergerite
Buergerite's a fairly rare (usually) dark brown opaque tourmaline - this specimen's from somewhere in San Luis Potosi, Mexico (one of those "old prospector" tales about the miner dying before he could reveal the exact location). It's named after Martin J. Buerger, a well known research scientist and crystallographer. Thanks to Chris Korpi at Pangaea Minerals for the specimen! |
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Row 12 |
 Chrysoberyl
Chrysoberyl can also be green, as this thumbnail twin from the new find in Madagascar shows. It really is greener than my other one (larger image, bottom panel) - my camera insists on adding red to it. Thanks to Throwin' Stones' auction on eBay for the specimen and the image! | |
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 Chrysoberyl, var. Cymophane
The opalescent variety of chrysoberyl is called cymophane - this excellent old miniature is from Witt Hill, Greenwood, Oxford County, Maine. The tiny red crystal (larger image, bottom center) is almost certainly zircon. Ex: E. A. M. Collection $50 tag. Thanks to Jasun McAvoy's auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! |
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 Corundum, var. Ruby
Rubies (one 8 mm and a bunch of smaller ones) from Khit Island, Karelia Republic, Northern Region, Russia - in the jewelry trade, it's probably considered merely a rose sapphire. Like most rubies, these fluoresce a deep red in longwave UV. |
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Row 13 |
 Corundum, var. Ruby
Ruby in matrix from a mine (closed since 1978) in Budhipada, Mysore Karnataka, India. Thanks to Peter J. Biskup's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Corundum, var. Ruby
Another ruby - this one's from Mogok, Myanmar (Burma) and weighs 3.67 carats. Definitely facetable! Thanks to Mike Keim at Marin Minerals for the specimen and the images! | |
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 Corundum, var. Ruby
This is a bright purplish-red ruby in zoisite matrix from the Raiz Mine, Polar Urals, Russia. There's also some calcite and mica - the mica's edges glow bright green under longwave UV. Thanks to Gary Lozonne at Lozonne's Minerals for the specimen! | |
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Row 14 |
 Corundum, var. Rubies
A handful of rubies from various locales - the righthandmost one is from Madagascar. |
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 Corundum, var. Ruby
A very nice translucent ruby (collected 1992) from Luc Yen, Yen Bihn, Yenbai Province, Vietnam. Thanks to Chris Wong's auction on eBay for the specimen! | |
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 Corundum, var. Ruby var. Anyolite
This miniature of ruby on grass green chromium zoisite with black tschermakite. is from the type locality of the Longido Hills, Kilimanjaro Region, Tanzania, This common combination of ruby and zoisite is called anyolite and is often cabbed if the ruby is not particularly gemmy. Thanks to Sharon Cisneros at theMineralogical Research Company for the specimen and the image! | |
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Row 15 |
 Corundum, var. Ruby var. Anyolite
A polished half-nodule of anyolite from the same locale. Thanks to Charles Viereck's auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! | |
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 Corundum, var. Synthetic Ruby
This is a reject piece of flux-grown ruby (on chrysoberyl) - the melt got too hot and began to attack the crucible. Most of the rubies are too internally fractured to cut. Thanks to SoCal Nevada's auction on eBay for the specimen and image! |
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 Corundum, var. Synthetic Ruby
This is a beautiful thin synthetic ruby crystal thumbnail from Judith Osmer's J. O. Crystal Co. RamauraTM cultured ruby company. These rubies are grown under conditions that duplicate nature and result in rubies that are indistinguihable from natural rubies - Judith adds a tiny amount of dopant that shifts the long-wave fluorescence wavelength to a slightly oranger color. Thanks to Diane & David Piccioli's auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! | |
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Row 16 |
 Corundum, var. Sapphire
A periwinkle sapphire from Madagascar. |
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 Corundum, var. Violet Sapphire
A gorgeous violet sapphire from Ganesh, Hunza Valley, Northern Areas, Pakistan. Thanks to the M. Phantom Minerals table at the 2000 Carnegie Gem & Mineral Show for the specimen! | |
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 Corundum, var. Sapphire
A small dark blue sapphire from the Kitui Mines, Kenya, Africa. Thanks to Frank Butler's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 17 |
 Corundum, var. Pink Sapphire on Margarite
A beautiful specimen of pink sapphire and green margarite (here, probably a sapphire alteration product) from Piedmont Orchards, Clarkesville, Habersham County, Georgia - the only known locale for this colorful combination. Thanks to Martha Crawford's auction on eBay for the specimen! | |
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 Corundum, var. Violet Sapphire
A beautiful red to violet sapphire on matrix miniature from Madagascar. | |
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 Corundum, var. Yellow Sapphire
A pale yellow sapphire thumbnail from Ratnapurna, Sri Lanka. Thanks to Dave Bunk (Dave Bunk Minerals) auction on eBay for the specimen! | |
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Row 18 |
 Corundum, var. Sapphire
A light blue "Ceylon Blue" sapphire thumbnail from Ratnapurna, Sri Lanka. Thanks to Graeber & Himes' table at the 2002 Carnegie Gem & Mineral Show for the specimen! |
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 Corundum, var. Pink Sapphire
A bright "hot pink" sapphire miniature on matrix from the Jagdali Ruby Mine, Sorobi District, Nuristan, Afghanistan. Thanks to Mike Shell's auction on eBay for the specimen and image! |
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 Dravite
This dravite (opaque magnesium tourmaline) with phlogopite mica on calcite is from Goshen, Ontario, Canada. Thanks to Darrel Merke's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 19 |
 Dravite
An excellent miniature (for the locale) of brown dravite with diopside from the Jones Farm, Gouverneur, St. Lawrence County, New York. Thanks to Emilie & Ron Kendig's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Dravite now "Dravo-uvite"
Beautiful deep orange dravites on talc from Kohistan, Pakistan. Note: These "dravites" from Pakistan and Afghanistan were analyzed (electron microprobe at UNO in 2003) and found to be an iron-poor, titanium-rich "dravo-uvite". [ GIA Article ] Thanks to Graeber & Himes' table at the 2001 Carnegie Gem & Mineral Show for the specimen! Thanks also to Farooq Hashmi for the compositional update and GIA article pointer! |
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 Dravite
An excellent sharp deep golden-brown (translucent at the edges) dravite crystal from Jagar-kot (Gujarkot ?), Nepal. Thanks to Walter Mroch's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 19 |
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 Elbaite
The pink/red/purple variety of elbaite is called rubellite by the jewelry industry - this is from a years-ago trip to Maine. | |
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 Elbaite
This is from that same trip to Maine - very dark, almost opaque green tourmalines. There's not very many prismatic faces here, only the typical rounded triangular cross-sections in this tourmaline pegmatite. |
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Row 20 |
 Elbaite
A small chunk of grass-green elbaite (the gemstone variety of tourmaline) - one of the natural polarizers. Jewelers refer to green tourmaline (the commonest color) as verdellite. This specimen, like a lot of gemstone quality minerals, comes from Minas Gerais in Brazil. Thanks to Brett Shafer at The Mineral Vug for the specimen and the image! |
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 Elbaite
This is a newer specimen of rubellite from San Diego County, CAlifornia. Most rubellite here occurs with lepidolite as the host rock. |
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 Elbaite
Indicolite's the blue-colored elbaite tourmaline and this one's from Itinga, Brazil. Thanks to MINERALMINERS.COM for the specimen and the image! Image copyrighted by mineralminers.com |
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Row 21 |
 Elbaite
This cuttable rubellite is from Kunar (Nuristan) Province, Afghanistan. Thanks to Brett Shafer at The Mineral Vug for the specimen! |
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 Elbaite
This yellowish-green tourmaline with a pink center (probably due to the lepidolite at the base) and a smooth pinacoidal termination comes from Gamata in Badakhshan, Afghanistan. Thanks to John Veevaert at Trinity Minerals for the specimen and the images! | |
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 Elbaite
A lovely rainbow tourmaline from the Mina do Sapo, Goiabeira, Aimorés, Rio Doce, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Thanks to Tom & Vicki Loomis at Dakota Matrix Minerals for the specimen and the image! | |
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Row 22 |
 Elbaite with Cassiterite
This is a really neat micromount of bicolor green tourmaline with a cassiterite cluster and one millimeter-sized melanite garnet around the base. It's from Resplendor, Aimorés, Rio Doce, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Thanks to Tom & Vicki Loomis at Dakota Matrix Minerals for the specimen and the image! |
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 Elbaite
The main tourmaline in this specimen from Gilgit, Pakistan is a green-capped watermelon. There's also a cleavlandite rosette with a lepidolite center. Thanks to Jan Garland's (Fine Rocks) auction on eBay for the specimen! | |
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 Elbaite
This is a beautiful, gemmy, smoky teal tourmaline on a matrix of muscovite, albite, and either herderite or cleavlandite from the São Pedro Mine, Suaçuí, Malacacheta District, Teófilo Otoni, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Thanks to Mike Keim at Marin Minerals for the specimen and the image! | |
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Row 23 |
 Elbaite
This is as near to achroite (colorless tourmaline) as I've seen - mined in Brazil over twenty-five years ago. Thanks to Margaret's (Lidco) auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Elbaite
These tourmalines in this cabinet specimen from Minas Gerais, Brazil may look black but they're actually (mostly) transparent smoky dark blue and teal. Thanks to Antonis Frangoudis's auction on eBay for the specimen and the images! |
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 Elbaite
Similar to the "black" ones from Minas Gerais, these tourmalines from Mexico are a smoky dark blue. Thanks to Anne & Charles Steuart's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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Row 24 |
 Elbaite
This tourmaline and cookeite (a weathering product of tourmaline) is from the Mt. Mica Quarry in Paris, Oxford County, Maine. Thanks to Dennis Brown's auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Elbaite
Another Gilgit, Pakistan tourmaline - dark-green with a nice flat termination. Thanks to Jan Garland's (Fine Rocks) auction on eBay for the specimen! |
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 Elbaite
An odd configuration of forest-green tourmalines from Minas Gerais, Brazil - they're scattered randomly (and flat against the surface) on the quartz matrix. |
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Row 25 |
 Elbaite
Chatoyant (one side) verdellite from Brazil - this would make a beautiful cabochon. |
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 Elbaite
A beautiful sceptered verdellite from Brazil. Thanks to Rick & Deana Seng's auction on eBay for the specimen and images! |
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 Elbaite
A beautiful little achroite and rubellite combo from the Cruziero Mine, Santa Maria do Suaçui, Governador Valadares, Rio Doce, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Thanks to Keith Hayes' (KQ's Minerals) auction on eBay for the specimen and the image! |
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