1.7" Purple-Blue Cubic Fluorite Crystals with Calcite - Inner Mongolia

This is a gorgeous association of blue-purple cubic fluorite crystals and bladed calcite on a micro muscovite encrusted matrix, collected from the Yindu Deposit in Inner Mongolia, China. The crystals are in great shape and have spots of deeper coloration peppered throughout the their interior. There is a colorless, hexagonal crystal along one edge of the specimen. This unidentified crystal is highly fluorescent under shortwave UV.

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.

Calcite, CaCO3, is a carbonate mineral and the most stable polymorph of calcium carbonate. The other polymorphs are the minerals aragonite and vaterite. Calcite crystals are trigonal-rhombohedral, though actual calcite rhombohedra are rare as natural crystals. However, they show a remarkable variety of habits including acute to obtuse rhombohedra, tabular forms, and prisms. Calcite exhibits several twinning types adding to the variety of observed forms. It may occur as fibrous, granular, lamellar, or compact. Cleavage is usually in three directions parallel to the rhombohedron form.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Fluorite & Calcite
LOCATION
Yindu Deposit, Chifeng City, Inner Mongolia, China
SIZE
1.7 x 1.4"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#146939