User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Translations
gypsum
from selenous acid
- Italian: selenito
Synonyms
- satin spar (1)
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
- This article is about the mineral: for other meanings, see Selenite (disambiguation).
Varieties
The four crystalline varieties of gypsum are sometimes grouped together; however, selenite, satin spar, desert rose, and gypsum flower have differences.The most important identifying characteristic is
how soft gypsum is. Also because gypsum has natural insulating
properties, it feels warm to the touch.
General identifying descriptions of the related
crystalline varieties are:
Selenite
- most often transparent and colorless
- if selenite crystals show translucency, opacity, and/or color, it is caused by the presence of other minerals (including druse)
- druse is the crust of tiny, minute, or micro crystals that form or fuse either within or upon the surface of a rock cavity, geode, or another crystal
Satin Spar
Desert Rose
- rosette shaped gypsum with outer druse of sand or with sand throughout - most often sand colored (in all the colors that sand can exhibit)
- the desert rose name can also be applied to barite desert roses (another related sulfate mineral) - barite, too, is a harder mineral - and is heavier and not as warm to the touch
Gypsum Flower
- rosette shaped gypsum with spreading fibers - can include outer druse
- the difference between desert roses and gypsum flowers is that desert roses look like roses, whereas gypsum flowers form a myriad of shapes
Use and history
Because of the long history of the commercial value and use of selenite, the four crystalline varieties have been sometimes ignored, except as a curiosity or as rock collectibles.Since the late 20th century, with the growing
interest in crystal
therapy and crystal
healing in the New Age, Neo Pagan, and
alternative
healing countercultures, the four crystalline varieties of
gypsum have increased in popularity and commercial value. This
increased interest has translated itself into both the retail
mineral and jewellery trades. In the retail mineral trade, all four
crystalline varieties are offered as rough, carved, or tumbled
specimens. In the retail jewellery trade, selenite crystals with
interior druse are offered as a form of drusy jewellery.
Crystal habit and properties
Crystal habit refers to the shapes that crystals exhibit. (The)Selenite crystals commonly occur as tabular, reticular, and columnar crystals, often with
no imperfections or inclusions;
and thereby, appear water or glass-like. Nevertheless, there are
many collectible selenite crystals that have interesting inclusions
such as, accompanying related minerals, interior druse, dendrites,
and fossils. In some
rare instances, water was encased as a fluid
inclusion when the crystal formed. Selenite sometimes forms in
thin tabular or mica-like
sheets; and has been used as glass panes. Selenite crystals
sometimes will also exhibit bladed rosette habit (usually
transparent) often with accompanying transparent, columnar
crystals. Selenite can be found both attached to a matrix
or base rock; but can commonly be found as entire free-floating
crystals, often in clay beds.
Satin spar is almost always prismatic and fibrous in a
parallel crystal habit. Satin spar often occurs in seams, some of
them quite long; and is often attached to a matrix or base
rock.
Desert roses are most often bladed, exhibiting
the familiar shape of a rose, and almost always have an exterior
druse. Desert roses are almost always unattached to a matrix or
base rock; most often found lying around.
Gypsum flowers are most often acicular, scaly, stellate, and lenticular. Gypsum flowers
most often exhibit simple twinning
(known as contact twins); where that parallel, long, needle-like
crystals, sometimes having severe curves and bends, will frequently
form “ram’s horns”, "fishtail", "spear-head", and "swallowtail"
twins. Gypsum flowers sometimes form quite densely in acicular
mats; and can be quite fragile. Gypsum flowers often are attached
to a matrix or base rock.
Color
Gypsum crystals are colorless (most often selenite), white (or pearly - most often satin spar), gray, brown, beige, orange, pink, yellow, light red, and green. Colors are caused by the presence of other mineral inclusions such as, copper ores, sulfur and sulfides,silver, iron ores, coal, calcite, dolomite, limestone, and opal.Transparency
Gypsum crystals can be transparent (most often selenite), translucent (most often satin spar - also selenite), and opaque (most often the rosettes). Opacity can be caused by impurities, inclusions, druse, and crust - and can occur in all four crystalline varieties.Luster
Both selenite and satin spar are often glassy or vitreous, pearly, and silky - especially on cleavage surfaces. Luster is not often exhibited in the rosettes, due to their exterior druse; nevertheless, the rosettes often show glassy to pearly luster on edges. Gypsum flowers usually exhibit more luster than desert roses.It is not recommended that you leave any form or
variety of gypsum in water - as extended submersion will either
dissolve or degrade the mineral. Detergents and soaps should be
avoided, as they affect luster, particularly with selenite and
satin spar - even lukewarm water can affect luster of selenite and
satin spar.
Play of Color
Fibrous satin spar exhibits chatoyancy (cat’s eye effect).When cut across the fibers and polished on the
ends, satin spar exhibits an optical
illusion when placed on a printed or pictured surface; and is
often called and sold as the “television stone” (as is ulexite). Print and pictures
appear to be on the surface of the sample.
Some selenite and satin spar specimens exhibit
fluorescence or
phosphorescence.
Tenacity
All of the four crystalline varieties are slightly flexible, though will break if bent significantly. They are not elastic, meaning they can be bent, but will not bend back on their own. Both rosettes tend to be more fragile and brittle than selenite and satin spar.All four crystalline varieties are sectile - soft enough to be
easily be scratched with a fingernail . The rosettes are not as
quite soft due to their exterior druse; nevertheless, they too can
be scratched. Gypsum flowers can sometimes be brittle -
particularly acicular gypsum flowers.
Care in handling is recommended for all four
crystalline varieties.
Size
Giant selenite crystals measuring 12 meters long have been found in the Naica Mine of Chihuahua, Mexico.Occurrence
Gypsum occurs on every continent and is the most common of all the sulfate minerals.Gypsum is formed as an evaporative mineral,
frequently found in alkaline lake muds, clay beds, evaporated seas,
salt flats, and caves. Gypsum, also, is frequently found in
conjunction with other minerals such as, copper ores, sulfur and
sulfides, silver, iron ores, coal, calcite, dolomite, limestone,
and opal. Gypsum has been dated to almost every geologic age.
In dry, desert conditions and arid areas, sand
may become trapped both on the inside and the outside of gypsum
crystals as they form. Interior inclusion of sand can take on
shapes such as, an interior hourglass shape common to selenite
crystals of the ancient Great
Salt Plains Lake bed, Oklahoma, USA. Exterior inclusion occurs
as embedded sand grains on the surface such as, commonly seen in
the familiar desert rose.
When gypsum dehydrates severely, anhydrite is formed. If water
is reintroduced, gypsum can and will reform - including as the four
crystalline varieties. An example of gypsum crystals reforming in
modern times is found at Philips Copper Mine (closed and
abandoned), Putnam County, New York, USA where selenite micro
crystal coatings are commonly found on numerous surfaces (rock and
otherwise) in the cave and in the dump.
Whereas geology, mineralogy, and rockhounding
groups, clubs, and societies as well as museums usually date,
photograph, and note location of minerals, much of the retail
mineral and jewellery trade can be somewhat casual about locations
and descriptive claims.
See also
- Great Salt Plains Lake and Great Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge, Oklahoma, USA - see also #4 in references below
- Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico, USA - see also #18 in external links below
- Naica Mine, Mexico - see also #19, 20, 21 in external links below
References
External links
- http://webmineral.com/data/Gypsum.shtml Web Mineral - gypsum plus some information on the crystalline varieties
- http://www.minmax.net/min.php?SID=d5c8f0db86dbab36ca848b0682a8c177 MinMax Mineral Information System - gypsum plus some information on the crystalline varieties - type "gypsum" in search bar to reach page (in German)
- http://www.answers.com/topic/gypsum Answers.com - gypsum plus some information on the crystalline varieties
- http://www.mineralatlas.com/mineral%20photos/G/gypsum%20cp.htm Mineral Atlas - gypsum photograph gallery - page 1 - over 300 photographs of all four crystalline varieties showing numerous locations, habits, and coloration
- http://www.mindat.org/show.php?id=1784&ld=1&pho= Mindat.org - scientific description of gypsum plus list of localities - extensive list of over 2000 gypsum occurrences, inclusive of crystalline varieties, worldwide on all continents including Antarctica - Mindat.org states that not all occurrences are confirmed - and listings do not necessarily have photographs
- http://www.mindat.org/gallery.php?cform_is_valid=1&min=1784&cf_pager_page=1 Mindat.org - gypsum photograph gallery - page 1 - gallery of over 60 pages and over 600 photographs of all four crystalline varieties showing numerous locations, habits, and coloration
- http://www.mindat.org/min-8573.html Mindat.org - satin spar localities and some photographs
- http://www.lochstein.de/hoehlen/A/sm/kraus/kraus.htm Kraushöhle, Gams bei Hieflau, Austria - gypsum speleothems (in German)
- [http://64.233.179.104/translate_c?hl=en&sl=de&u=http://www.alpenregion.ch/assistent/fotogallery/zoom/11/&prev=/search%3Fq%3DKristallgrotte%26start%3D10%26hl%3Den%26rls%3DGGGL,GGGL:2006-26,GGGL:en%26sa%3DN] Kristallgrotte - photograph of selenite crystals in http://www.showcaves.com/english/de/mines/Marienglas.html Marienglashöhle Show Mine, Germany - selenite was commonly used in Germany during mediaeval times for glass panes in windows and, in particular, for coverings of pictures of the Madonna - in Germany, this form of selenite was usually referred to as Marienglas or Mary’s Glass
- http://giantcrystals.strahlen.org/europe/pilar.htm Pilar de Jaravia, Spain - large columnar selenite crystals in massive geode at Quien Tal Pensara Mine - also see http://giantcrystals.strahlen.org/indexneu.htm The Giant Crystal Project
- http://giantcrystals.strahlen.org/america/lechuguilla.htm Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico, USA - speleothems
- Penoles Mine, Naica, Chihuahua, Mexico - large gypsum mine - massive selenite crystals in Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals) - selenite "blades" in Cueva de las Espadas (Caves of Swords or Xochitl Cave) - “shark (or dog) teeth” selenite formations throughout the caves - one cave contains selenite crystals described as "long, slender, slightly milky needles with tubular water-filled cavities and movable bubbles" - http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/collectors_corner/arc/naicagyp.htm 1927 article on the giant crystals of Niaca - http://laventa.it/en/naica_crystal_cave.html The Naica-Peñoles project - http://giantcrystals.strahlen.org/america/naica.htm The Giant Crystal Project Site-Naica
selenite in Catalan: Selenita
selenite in German: Marienglas
selenite in Spanish: Selenita
selenite in French: Sélénite (gypse)
selenite in Italian: Selenite
selenite in Hebrew: סלניט
selenite in Latvian: Selenīts
selenite in Lithuanian: Selenitas
selenite in Dutch: Seleniet
selenite in Polish: Selenit
selenite in Portuguese:
Selenita