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beryl

 
Dictionary: ber·yl   (bĕr'əl) pronunciation
n.
A transparent to translucent glassy mineral, essentially aluminum beryllium silicate, Be3Al2Si6O18, occurring in hexagonal prisms and constituting the chief source of beryllium. Transparent varieties in white, green, blue, yellow, or pink are valued as gems.

[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin bēryllus, from Greek bērullos, from bērullion, from Prakrit veruliya, from Pali veḷuriya, perhaps akin to Tamil veḷiru or viḷar, to whiten, become pale.]

berylline ber'yl·line (-ə-lĭn, -līn') adj.

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Mineral composed of beryllium aluminum silicate, Be3Al2(SiO3)6, a commercial source of beryllium. Several varieties are valued as gemstones: aquamarine (pale blue-green); emerald (deep green); heliodor (golden yellow); and morganite (pink). Before 1925 beryl was used only as a gemstone, but since then many important uses have been found for beryllium (e.g., in nuclear reactors, space vehicles, and X-ray tubes). No large deposits have been found, and most production is a by-product of the mining of feldspar and mica. Brazil is a major producer; others include Zimbabwe, South Africa, Namibia, and the U.S.

For more information on beryl, visit Britannica.com.

The most common beryllium mineral. Beryl, Al2[Be3Si6O18], crystallizes in the hexagonal system. The crystal structure consists of six-membered rings of corner-sharing silicon-oxygen (SiO4) tetrahedra cross-linked by corner-sharing beryllium-oxygen (BeO4) tetrahedra to make a three-dimensional honeycomb structure; aluminum-oxygen (AlO6) octahedra lie between the Si6O18 rings. Beryl has a vitreous luster and is typically white to bluish- or yellowish-green, but it can also be shades of yellow, blue, and pink. Its hardness is 7.5–8 on Mohs scale; it has an imperfect basal cleavage and a specific gravity of 2.7–2.9 (increasing with alkali content). Weakly colored varieties can be confused with quartz or apatite. See also Crystal structure; Hardness scales.

Beryl is a minor accessory mineral in many natural environments, most commonly in granites and associated hydrothermally altered rocks. Granitic pegmatites constitute the major source of beryl (used for beryllium and gemstones); rarely, single crystals weigh many tons. Alkali-rich beryl occurs in complex pegmatites which contain abundant rare-element minerals such as spodumene, lepidolite, and tourmaline. Alkali-poor beryl occurs in mineralogically simple pegmatites, tin and tungsten deposits, and hydrothermal veins. The gem varieties of beryl, aquamarine (blue), emerald (deep green), and morganite (pink to red), are produced from pegmatites (aquamarine, morganite, some emerald), veins (some aquamarine, most emerald), and, rarely, rhyolites (ruby-red morganite). See also Beryllium; Beryllium minerals; Pegmatite; Silicate minerals.


 
beryl (bĕr'ĭl), mineral, a silicate of beryllium and aluminum, Be3Al2Si6O18, extremely hard, occurring in hexagonal crystals that may be of enormous size and are usually white, yellow, green, blue, or colorless. Beryl is commonly used as a gemstone. The refractive index is low, and the stones have little or no fire. The most valued variety of beryl is emerald. An aquamarine is a blue to sea-green beryl; morganites are rose-red beryls. It is the principal raw material for the element beryllium and its compounds.


Group of precious stones that includes emerald and aqua-marine. Colorless beryl is known as goshenite; rose beryl is called verobyerite or morganite; golden beryl is called heliodor; and there are also pale blue stones (aquamarine) and blue-green stones. Beryl was traditionally recommended for curing throat or liver disorders. It was also said to preserve wedded love and to be a good medium for magical vision.


Be
Hexagonal -- Dihexagonal bipyramidal

Environment

Almost exclusively a pegmatite mineral, rarely in high-temperature veins and in rhyolite seams and pockets where it has formed from beryllium-bearing gases or very hot solutions.

Crystal description

One of the most beautifully crystallized minerals, usually in prismatic hexagons, sometimes several feet long and weighing many pounds (kilos). Rarely in tabular crystals; the pink cesium-bearing beryls are more likely to develop this flat habit. Also massive and embedded as grains or columnar masses.

Physical properties

White, blue, yellow, green, pink, red. Luster glassy; hardness 8; specific gravity 2.6-2.8; fracture conchoidal; cleavage poor basal; clarity gemmy and transparent, to translucent; sometimes weakly fluorescent yellow (emerald may fluoresce pink to deep red also, especially as a synthetic).

Composition

Beryllium aluminum silicate (14.0% BeO, 19.0% Al 2 O 3 , 67.0% SiO 2 , sodium, lithium, and cesium may replace part of the beryllium, thus reducing the BeO content and lowering its value as an ore of beryllium). Impurities create many of the characteristic colors; iron is responsible for aquamarine, chromium and/or vanadium for emerald, and manganese for red beryl.

Tests

Glows white, but does not decrepitate violently like quartz, instead remaining whitened but intact in the flame. Edges fuse with great difficulty to a white glass. Insoluble in the common acids.

Distinguishing characteristics

The pegmatitic occurrence and six-sided crystal outline are very characteristic. Only likely to be confused with apatite (which is much softer, often fluorescent, and soluble in acid), with white, massive topaz (wholly infusible and with a good cleavage), and with quartz (which, before attaining near-red heat, decrepitates violently).

Occurrence

Ordinary beryl is the chief ore of beryllium. Transparent varieties have gem value and are called aquamarine (blue and blue-green), emerald (green), golden beryl (yellow-brown), morganite (pink), and ruby (red). Since as a rule it is a mineral of once deeply buried rocks, it will be found primarily on gneiss and schist roofs above batholiths, where pegmatites have been exposed on the surface as weathering has removed overlying formations. New England has many pegmatite localities; their beryls, sometimes enormous, usually appear as well-formed crystals in quartz and feldspar pegmatites. Crystals ordinarily break free of their matrix without much difficulty. Farther south, North Carolina pegmatites are also sources of common beryl, with emeralds from the chromium-colored variety occurring at several localities in the state. Tabular beryl crystals (generally thought to indicate a high cesium content) have been found in some abundance in New Mexico at Dixon. Large crystals are found in the Black Hills of South Dakota, though gem material is unlikely. Short-prismatic pink (morganite) beryls occur with the aquamarine, kunzite, and colored tourmaline in San Diego Co., California. An unusual occurrence for beryl is that of ruby red crystals in the Wha Wha Mountains, Utah. where they are more or less embedded in a white rhyolite, 1-1Ɖ in. (2-3 cm) long. Smaller, flatter, and paler raspberry-pink crystals and rose-colored clusters have been found in the gas cavity in the Thomas Range (Utah) rhyolite, best known for its topaz and bixbyite.

In a freak paragenesis, emeralds are found in calcite veins in a black limestone at Muso, and in almost-pegmatite veins at Chivor, and Gachala, Colombia. Biotite schists bordering a pegmatite are considered the source of the chromium coloring emeralds in the Ekaterinberg, (Sverdlovsk) Russia district, accompanied there by alexandrite, chrysoberyl, and phenakite. Large crystals of aquamarine and fine morganites come from Madagascar. Brazil has long been the chief source of aquamarine, and crystals weighing several hundred pounds (100-150 kg) have been recovered from streambeds and dikes, principally in Minas Gerais, Brazil. In a tin mine of South Africa, clusters of slender needles are unusual gangue minerals in an unusual vein deposit. Numerous pegmatites have lately been worked in the mountainous Afghanistan-Pakistan border area; large numbers of splendid aquamarine crystals have been found, though most are too pale to have other than specimen value.



Wikipedia: Beryl
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Beryl

Three varieties of beryl: morganite, aquamarine, and heliodor
General
Category Silicate mineral
Chemical formula Be3Al2(SiO3)6
Identification
Molar mass 537.50
Color Green, Blue, Yellow, Colorless, Pink & others.
Crystal habit Massive to well Crystalline
Crystal system Hexagonal (6/m 2/m 2/m) Space Group: P 6/mсc
Cleavage Imperfect on the [0001]
Fracture Conchoidal
Mohs scale hardness 7.5-8
Luster Vitreous
Streak White
Diaphaneity Transparent to opaque
Specific gravity Average 2.76
Optical properties Uniaxial (-)
Refractive index nω = 1.564-1.595,
nε = 1.568-1.602
Birefringence δ = 0.0040-0.0070
Ultraviolet fluorescence None (some fracture filling materials used to improve emerald's clarity do fluoresce, but the stone itself does not)
References [1][2]

The mineral beryl is a beryllium aluminium cyclosilicate with the chemical formula Be3Al2(SiO3)6. The hexagonal crystals of beryl may be very small or range to several meters in size. Terminated crystals are relatively rare. Pure beryl is colorless, but it is frequently tinted by impurities; possible colors are green, blue, yellow, red, and white. The name comes from the Greek beryllos which referred to a precious blue-green color-of-sea-water stone.[1] The term was later adopted for the mineral beryl more exclusively.[2]

Contents

Deposits

Beryl of various colors is found most commonly in granitic pegmatites, but also occurs in mica schists in the Ural Mountains, and limestone in Colombia. Beryl is often associated with tin and tungsten ore bodies. Beryl is found in Europe in Norway, Austria, Germany, Sweden (especially morganite), and Ireland, as well as Brazil, Colombia, Madagascar, Russia, South Africa, the United States, and Zambia. U.S. beryl locations are in California, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Connecticut, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Dakota, and Utah.

New England's pegmatites have produced some of the largest beryls found, including one massive crystal from the Bumpus Quarry in Albany, Maine with dimensions 5.5 m by 1.2 m (18 ft by 4 ft) with a mass of around 18 metric tons; it is New Hampshire's state mineral. As of 1999, the largest known crystal of any mineral in the world is a crystal of beryl from Madagascar, 18 meters long and 3.5 meters in diameter.[3]

Varieties

Varieties of beryl have been considered gemstones since prehistoric times:

Morganite

Morganite (Brésil).jpg

Morganite, also known as "pink beryl," "rose beryl," "pink emerald," and "cesian beryl," is a rare light pink to rose-colored gem-quality variety of beryl. Orange/yellow varieties of morganite can also be found, and color banding is common. It can be routinely heat treated to remove patches of yellow and is occasionally treated by irradiation to improve its color. The pink color of morganite is attributed to Mn2+ ions.[4]

Discovery and naming

Morganite was first discovered together with other gemstone minerals, such as tourmaline and kunzite, at Pala, California, early in the twentieth century. This started a bonanza for these quite popular gemstones which drew the attention of gemologist George Frederick Kunz, who knew that pink beryl was quite a rarity.[5] In 1911, Kunz suggested naming the pink variety of beryl "morganite" after financier J. P. Morgan.[6]

The Rose of Maine

On October 7, 1989, one of the largest gem morganite specimens ever uncovered, eventually called "The Rose of Maine," was found at the Bennett Quarry in Buckfield, Maine.[7] The crystal, originally somewhat orange in hue, was 23 cm long and about 30 cm across, and weighed (along with its matrix) just over 50 lbs (23 kg).[8]

Bixbite

Bixbite.gif

Red beryl (also known as "bixbite", "red emerald", or "scarlet emerald") is a red variety of beryl. It was first described in 1904 for an occurrence, its type locality, at Maynard's Claim (Pismire Knolls), Thomas Range, Juab County, Utah, USA.[9][10] The old synonym bixbite is deprecated from the CIBJO, because of the risk of confusion with the mineral bixbyite (also named after the mineralogist Maynard Bixby). The dark red color of bixbite is attributed to Mn3+ ions.[4]

Red beryl is rare and has only been reported from a handful of locations including: Wah Wah Mountains, Beaver County, Utah; Paramount Canyon, Sierra County, New Mexico; Round Mountain, Sierra County, New Mexico; and Juab County, Utah. The greatest concentration of gem-grade red beryl comes from the Violet Claim in the Wah Wah Mountains of mid-western Utah, discovered in 1958 by Lamar Hodges, of Fillmore, Utah, while he was prospecting for uranium.[11]

While gem beryls are ordinarily found in pegmatites and certain metamorphic rocks, bixbite occurs in topaz-bearing rhyolites. It formed by crystallizing under low pressure and high temperature from a pneumatolitic phase along fractures or within near-surface miarolitic cavities of the rhyolite. Associated minerals include bixbyite, quartz, orthoclase, topaz, spessartine, pseudobrookite and hematite. The red color is thought to be from manganese substituting for aluminium in the beryl structure.

Aquamarine and maxixe

AguamarinhaEZ.jpg

Aquamarine (from Lat. aqua marina, "water of the sea") is a blue or turquoise variety of beryl. It occurs at most localities which yield ordinary beryl, some of the finest coming from Russia. The gem-gravel placer deposits of Sri Lanka contain aquamarine. Clear yellow beryl, such as occurs in Brazil, is sometimes called aquamarine chrysolite. When corundum presents the bluish tint of typical aquamarine, it is often termed Oriental aquamarine. The deep blue version of aquamarine is called maxixe. Its color fades to white when exposed to sunlight or is subjected to heat treatment, though the color returns with irradiation.

The pale blue color of aquamarine is attributed to Fe2+. The Fe3+ ions produce golden-yellow color, and when both Fe2+ and Fe3+ are present, the color is a darker blue as in maxixe. Decoloration of maxixe by light or heat thus may be due to the charge transfer Fe3+ and Fe2+.[4][12][13][14] Dark-blue maxixe color can be produced in green, pink or yellow beryl by irradiating it with high-energy particles (gamma rays, neutrons or even X-rays).[15]

In the United States, aquamarines can be found at the summit of Mt. Antero in the Sawatch Range in central Colorado. In Wyoming, aquamarine has been discovered in the Big Horn mountains, near Powder River Pass. In Brazil, there are mines in the states of Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo and Bahia. The Mines of Colombia, Zambia, Madagascar, Malawi, Tanzania and Kenya also produce aquamarine.

The biggest aquamarine ever mined was found at the city of Marambaia, Minas Gerais, Brazil, in 1910. It weighed over 110 kg, and its dimensions were 48.5 cm long and 42 cm in diameter.

Culture usage

  • Aquamarine is the birthstone associated with March. It is also the gemstone for the 19th Anniversary.[citation needed]

Emerald

Émeraude (Colombie).jpg

Emerald refers to green beryl, colored by trace amounts of chromium and sometimes vanadium.[4][16] The word "emerald" comes from Latin smaragdus from Greek smaragdos - σμάραγδος, its original source being a Semitic word izmargad or the Sanskrit word, marakata, meaning "green".[17] Most emeralds are highly included, so their brittleness (resistance to breakage) is classified as generally poor.

Emeralds in antiquity were mined by the Egyptians and in Austria, as well as Swat in northern Pakistan.[18] A rare type of emerald known as a trapiche emerald is occasionally found in the mines of Colombia. A trapiche emerald exhibits a "star" pattern; it has raylike spokes of dark carbon impurities that give the emerald a six-pointed radial pattern. It is named for the trapiche, a grinding wheel used to process sugarcane in the region. Colombian emeralds are generally the most prized due to their transparency and fire. Some of the most rare emeralds come from three main emerald mining areas in Colombia: Muzo, Coscuez, and Chivor. Fine emeralds are also found in other countries, such as Zambia, Brazil, Zimbabwe, Madagascar, Pakistan, India, Afghanistan and Russia. In the US, emeralds can be found in Hiddenite, North Carolina. In 1998, emeralds were discovered in the Yukon.

Emerald is a rare and valuable gemstone and, as such, it has provided the incentive for developing synthetic emeralds. Both hydrothermal[19] and flux-growth synthetics have been produced. The first commercially successful emerald synthesis process was that of Carroll Chatham. The other large producer of flux emeralds was Pierre Gilson Sr., which has been on the market since 1964. Gilson's emeralds are usually grown on natural colorless beryl seeds which become coated on both sides. Growth occurs at the rate of 1 mm per month, a typical seven-month growth run producing emerald crystals of 7 mm of thickness.[20] The green color of emeralds is attributed to presence of Fe3+ and Fe2+ ions.[12] [13][14]

Goshenite

Zrost beryli, Namibia3.jpg
Crystal structure of beryl

Colorless beryl is called goshenite. The name originates from Goshen, Massachusetts where it was originally described. Since all these color varieties are caused by impurities and pure beryl is colorless, it might be tempting to assume that goshenite is the purest variety of beryl. However, there are several elements that can act as inhibitors to color in beryl and so this assumption may not always be true. The name goshenite has been said to be on its way to extinction and yet it is still commonly used in the gemstone markets. Goshenite is found to some extent in almost all beryl localities. In the past, goshenite was used for manufacturing eyeglasses and lenses owing to its transparency. Nowadays, it is most commonly used for gemstone purposes and also considered as a source of beryllium.[21][22]

The gem value of goshenite is relatively low. However, goshenite can be colored yellow, green, pink, blue and in intermediate colors by irradiating it with high-energy particles. The resoluting color depends on the content of Ca, Sc, Ti, V, Fe, and Co inmpurities.[12]

Golden beryl and heliodor

Golden beryl
Heliodor

Golden beryl can range in colors from pale yellow to a brilliant gold. Unlike emerald, golden beryl has very few flaws. The term "golden beryl" is sometimes synonymous with heliodor (from Greek hēlios - ἥλιος "sun" + dōron - δῶρον "gift") but golden beryl refers to pure yellow or golden yellow shades, while heliodor refers to the greenish-yellow shades. The golden yellow color is attributed to Fe3+ ions.[4][12] Both golden beryl and heliodor are used as gems. Probably the largest cut golden beryl is the flawless 2054 carat stone on display in the Hall of Gems, Washington, D.C.[23]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b http://www.mindat.org/min-819.html Beryl: Beryl mineral information and data, Mindat
  2. ^ a b http://www.webmineral.com/data/Beryl.shtml Webmineral Data
  3. ^ G. Cressey and I. F. Mercer, Crystals, London, Natural History Museum, 1999
  4. ^ a b c d e "Color in the Beryl group". http://minerals.caltech.edu/FILES/Visible/BERYL/Index.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  5. ^ Morganite discovery in Pala, CA, AGTA website, accessed online February 20, 2007
  6. ^ Morganite, International Colored Gemstone Association, accessed online January 22, 2007
  7. ^ Mineralogy of the Bennett pegmatite, Oxford County, Maine, article, Citation of discovered and destruction of the Rose of Maine (see bottom paragraph of first page)
  8. ^ The Rose of Maine, image, The Rose of Maine at the site of its discovery
  9. ^ MinDat - Red beryl
  10. ^ Carl Ege, Utah Geological Survey
  11. ^ "Red Emerald History". 2007-11-21. http://www.redemerald.com/history.html. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  12. ^ a b c d Ibragimova, E. M. (2009). "Correlations between admixtures and color centers created upon irradiation of natural beryl crystals". Inorganic Materials 45: 162. doi:10.1134/S0020168509020101. 
  13. ^ a b Viana, R. R. (2002). "Characterization of beryl (aquamarine variety) by Mössbauer spectroscopy". Physics and Chemistry of Minerals 29: 78. doi:10.1007/s002690100210. 
  14. ^ a b Blak, Ana Regina (1983). "Optical absorption and electron spin resonance in blue and green natural beryl: A reply". Physics and Chemistry of Minerals 9: 279. doi:10.1007/BF00309581. 
  15. ^ K. Nassau et al. (1976). Anerican mineralogist 61: 100. http://www.minsocam.org/ammin/AM61/AM61_100.pdf. 
  16. ^ Hurlbut, Cornelius S. Jr, & Kammerling, Robert C., 1991, Gemology, p. 203, John Wiley & Sons, New York
  17. ^ Fernie M.D., W.T. (1906). Precious Stones for Curative Wear. John Wright. & Co.. 
  18. ^ Giuliani, G. (2000). "Oxygen Isotopes and Emerald Trade Routes Since Antiquity". Science 287: 631. doi:10.1126/science.287.5453.631. 
  19. ^ Hosaka, M (1991). "Hydrothermal growth of gem stones and their characterization". Progress in Crystal Growth and Characterization of Materials 21: 71. doi:10.1016/0960-8974(91)90008-Z. 
  20. ^ Nassau, K., 1980, Gems Made By Man, Gemological Institute of America, ISBN 0873110161
  21. ^ "Goshenite, the colorless variety of beryl". http://www.galleries.com/minerals/gemstone/goshenit/goshenit.htm. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  22. ^ "Goshenite gem". http://opticalmineralogy.com/the-silicates-mineral-class/goshenite-gem/. Retrieved 2009-06-06. 
  23. ^ Arthur Thomas (2007). Gemstones. New Holland Publishers. p. 77. ISBN 1845376021. http://books.google.com/books?id=MPZK8ILOSR0C. 

References

  • Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., John Wiley and Sons, New York ISBN 0-471-80580-7
  • Sinkankas, John, 1994, Emerald & Other Beryls, Geoscience Press, ISBN 0-8019-7114-4

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