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  2. Fluorite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluorite

    The largest documented single crystal of fluorite was a cube 2.12 meters in size and weighing approximately 16 tonnes. [23] Fluorite on barite from the Berbes mine, Ribadesella, Asturias (Spain). Fluorite crystal, 2.2 cm. In Asturias there are several fluorite deposits known internationally for the quality of the specimens they have yielded

  3. List of minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_minerals

    Crystal of titanite with adularia and minor clinochlore on matrix Fluorite crystal sitting beside a glassy, dark green tourmaline crystal, which itself sits atop a green tourmaline of a lighter color. All sit on a bed of sparkly, bladed stark white albite Crystals of turquoise, from Copper Cities Mine, Globe-Miami District, Arizona, USA

  4. Blue John (mineral) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_John_(mineral)

    [1]: 13 The minerals were deposited in veins by layers of crystals precipitating from hot fluids coating the walls of fractures, caves, and other cavities. [ 1 ] : 17 Petrological analysis has shown that the Blue John, like fluorite elsewhere in the Peak District, crystallised from a highly saline fluid at temperatures of 90–120 °C or ...

  5. Creedite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creedite

    Creedite typically occurs with low-grade metamorphic rocks on a fluorite – calcite – quartz matrix or on a sulfide-matrix with its oxidized products. Creedite most commonly found in the form of creedite – carbonate – cyanotrichite – woodwardite – spangolite – kaolinite association.

  6. Fluoride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluoride

    Fluorite crystals Fluorine is estimated to be the 13th-most abundant element in Earth's crust and is widely dispersed in nature, entirely in the form of fluorides. The vast majority is held in mineral deposits , the most commercially important of which is fluorite (CaF 2 ). [ 4 ]

  7. Chlorophane - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chlorophane

    Chlorophane, also sometimes known as pyroemerald, cobra stone, and pyrosmaragd, is a rare variety of the mineral fluorite with the unusual combined properties of thermoluminescence, thermophosphoresence, triboluminescence, and fluorescence: it will emit light in the visible spectrum when exposed to ultraviolet light, when heated, and when ...