The Daily Croissant

Eclectic Perambulations in the Noosphere

  • Molecular Expressions : The Birthstone Collection - Sapphire

    • 29 Apr 2012
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    • April 29 2012 Crystals Gems Minerals Photomicrography Polarized Light Sappire
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    "The blue brilliance of the sapphire has been treasured for thousands of years, its color thought to represent heavenly or celestial qualities. The ancient Persians believed that the earth rested on a giant sapphire and that its reflection gave the sky its blue color. Jewish tradition holds that Moses was given the Ten Commandments on tablets of sapphire, making it the most sacred of gemstones. 

    Sapphire is a form of the mineral corundum, a crystalline form of aluminum oxide and one of the most durable minerals that exists; only diamonds are harder. Trace impurities of iron and titanium are responsible for the deep blue color most people associate with sapphire. The gem also occurs in a variety of blue shades. Several other colors of corundum, such as yellow, reddish-orange, and violet, are also classified as sapphire. Red corundum crystals are called rubies. When cut into a cabochon (a convex, unfaceted form), some specimens of sapphire exhibit asterism; that is, a six-rayed star can be seen in the interior of the stone. Such stones are called star sapphires."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Molecular Expressions: The Birthstone Collection - Sapphire

    • 10 Apr 2012
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    • April 10 2012 Collections Crystals Gems Photomicrography Polarized Light
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    "The blue brilliance of the sapphire has been treasured for thousands of years, its color thought to represent heavenly or celestial qualities. The ancient Persians believed that the earth rested on a giant sapphire and that its reflection gave the sky its blue color. Jewish tradition holds that Moses was given the Ten Commandments on tablets of sapphire, making it the most sacred of gemstones.

    Sapphire is a form of the mineral corundum, a crystalline form of aluminum oxide and one of the most durable minerals that exists; only diamonds are harder. Trace impurities of iron and titanium are responsible for the deep blue color most people associate with sapphire. The gem also occurs in a variety of blue shades. Several other colors of corundum, such as yellow, reddish-orange, and violet, are also classified as sapphire. Red corundum crystals are called rubies. When cut into a cabochon (a convex, unfaceted form), some specimens of sapphire exhibit asterism; that is, a six-rayed star can be seen in the interior of the stone. Such stones are called star sapphires."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Apophyllite with Heulandite and Stilbite

    • 20 Mar 2012
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    • Collections Crystals Gems India March 20 2012
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    Apophyllite-(KF) with Heulandite, Stilbite - Pune District, Maharashtra, India
    via danweinrich.com

     

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  • Molecular Expressions : The Birthstone Collection - Ruby

    • 16 Mar 2012
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    • Gems March 16 2012 Photomicrography Polarized Light Ruby
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_deehk

    "Ruby has been the world's most valued gemstone for thousands of years. In the ancient Sanskrit language, it was called ratnaraj or "king of precious stones". Even today, rubies are considered more valuable and rare than even the top quality colorless diamonds. 

    These gemstones are red variations of the mineral corundum, a crystalline form of aluminum oxide and one of the most durable minerals that exists; only diamonds are harder. The rich red color arises from the substitution of a small number of aluminum atoms by chromium atoms. Pure corundum is a colorless, trigonal crystal, but it occurs in a wide variety of colors due to infiltrations of other elements. All color variations of corundum, with the exception of ruby, are called sapphires."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Molecular Expressions: The Birthstone Collection - Ruby

    • 29 Feb 2012
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    • February 29 2012 Gems Minerals Photomicrography Polarized Light Ruby
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_xsomf

    Ruby has been the world's most valued gemstone for thousands of years. In the ancient Sanskrit language, it was called ratnaraj or "king of precious stones". Even today, rubies are considered more valuable and rare than even the top quality colorless diamonds.

    These gemstones are red variations of the mineral corundum, a crystalline form of aluminum oxide and one of the most durable minerals that exists; only diamonds are harder. The rich red color arises from the substitution of a small number of aluminum atoms by chromium atoms. Pure corundum is a colorless, trigonal crystal, but it occurs in a wide variety of colors due to infiltrations of other elements. All color variations of corundum, with the exception of ruby, are called sapphires.

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Molecular Expressions : The Birthstone Collection - Peridot

    • 17 Feb 2012
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    • February 17 2012 Gems Minerals Photomicrography Specimens
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_tivjc
    "Peridot (pronounced pair-a-doe), or precious olivine, is a volcanic gemstone that was once treasured by native Hawaiians as the tears of the Goddess-of-Fire, Pele. The transparent green stone is a variety of the mineral olivine, a silicate found in many igneous rocks and a major constituent of the Earth's upper mantle. The crystal system is orthorhombic with a hardness slightly less than quartz. Small crystallites of peridot are often found in the basalt rocks created by volcanoes and have been found in iron-nickel meteorites called pallasites. Some specimens of extraterrestrial peridot have even been faceted and set into jewelry."
    more via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Fluorite - Nagar, Hunza Valley, Gilgit District, Northern Areas, Pakistan

    • 13 Nov 2011
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    • 12November11 Collections Crystals Fluorite Gems Minerals Mines Pakistan
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    Media_httpwwwdanweinr_tfnun
    A large transparent lovely pale pink octahedral fluorite crystal measuring 6.0 cm in height is set on a matrix of colorless crystalline fluorite. No damage - the quality is excellent! Size: 7.1 x 6.3 x 5.0 cm.

    via danweinrich.com

     

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  • Molecular Expressions: The Birthstone Collection - Pearl

    • 9 Nov 2011
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    • 08November11 Gems Pearls Photomicrography Polarized Light
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_rthhh

    "Pearls are an organic gem created by oysters, clams, and mussels, mollusks that are found in both freshwater and marine habitats. Pearls harvested from saltwater are sometimes referred to as Oriental pearls, while those from freshwater are called freshwater or river pearls.  

    A pearl is an abnormal growth that results when a foreign object, such as a grain of sand, invades the soft inner tissues of a mollusk's body. The particle acts as an irritant inside the mollusk and is coated with layers of material called nacre, or mother-of-pearl, which is secreted by the animal's shell-secreting cells. Nacre is composed of aragonite, a form of calcium carbonate, and also contains a small amount of conchiolin, a horn-like organic substance (albuminoid) that is the main component of the mollusk's outer shell.

    These gems are characterized by their translucence, luster, and the delicate play of surface color called orient, which is the soft iridescence caused by the refraction of light by the layers of nacre. The more perfect the shape (spherical or drop like) and the deeper its luster, the greater the value of a pearl. Pearls are found in many colors but the most prized are white, black, cream, and rose -- the Indian rose pearls being the most esteemed. Color varies according to the species of mollusk and its environment."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Molecular Expressions : The Birthstone Collection - Opal

    • 29 Oct 2011
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    • 28October11 Collections Gems Opal Photomicrography Polarized Light
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_rbzhw
    "A popular gem for many centuries, the fiery, brilliant opal is considered a mineraloid because, unlike other mineral gems, it does not have a truly crystalline structure. Nonetheless, opal does possess a highly complex structure. Random chains composed of silicon and oxygen are packed into tiny spheres, which are irregular in size, concentration, and arrangement in most opals. Only opals with a perfectly aligned grid of silica spheres will exhibit a characteristic play of color, which results from the diffraction of light passing through the gem. The size of the spheres determines the wavelengths diffracted and, therefore, the colors seen by an observer. The brilliance of diffracted colors is determined by the regularity of the grid.  

    Opal is also one of the few gemstones that is sedimentary in origin. Millions of years ago, sandy sediments along the shorelines of ancient seas released silica into a solution that filled cracks in rocks, layers in clay, and even some fossils. As the silica solidified, some of it was transformed into opal, which still contains 6 to 10 percent water, a remnant of that ancient sea."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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  • Molecular Expressions: The Birthstone Collection - Garnet

    • 6 Oct 2011
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    • 05October11 Crystals Gems Photomicrography Polarized Light
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    Media_httpmicromagnet_wmhui

    "Garnet is the name for a group of related minerals, common to many regions of the world and often utilized as gemstones or abrasives. As gemstones, garnets appear in just about every color except blue: dark red, tangerine orange, translucent green, soft bluish-pink, and many others. Some garnets change color under different lighting conditions and others exhibit asterism, displaying a four-rayed star in reflected light. Most people, however, associate garnet with the dark red variety of stone that has been mined and worn as jewelry for thousands of years. The name garnet is thought to have come from the word pomegranate. Many ancient pieces of garnet jewelry are studded with tiny red stones that resemble a cluster of pomegranate seeds."

    via micro.magnet.fsu.edu

     

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