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scheelite

 
Dictionary: schee·lite   (shā'līt', shē'-) pronunciation
n.
A variously colored mineral, CaWO4, found in igneous rocks and used as an ore of tungsten.

[After Karl Wilhelm SCHEELE.]


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Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Scheelite
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A mineral consisting of calcium tungstate, CaWO4. Scheelite occurs in colorless to white, tetragonal crystals; it may also be massive and granular. Its fracture is uneven, and its luster is vitreous to adamantine. Scheelite has a hardness of 4.5–5 on Mohs scale and a specific gravity of 6.1. Its streak is white. The mineral is transparent and fluoresces bright bluish-white under ultraviolet light.

Scheelite is an important tungsten mineral and occurs in small amounts in vein deposits. The most important scheelite deposit in the United States is near Mill City, Nevada. See also Tungsten.


 
Columbia Encyclopedia: scheelite
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scheelite (shā'līt, shē'-), heavy white or yellow mineral, calcium tungstate, CaWO4, crystallizing in the tetragonal system. It is found in granite pegmatites, in contact-metamorphic deposits (especially limestones intruded by granites), and in quartz veins. It is an important ore of tungsten and is mined in many parts of the world. Scheelite fluoresces bright bluish-white in ultraviolet radiation, a distinguishing feature utilized in prospecting and mining.


Rock & Mineral Guide: scheelite
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CaWO
Tetragonal -- Tetragonal bipyramidal

Environment

Contact-metamorphic deposits, high-temperature quartz veins, and, rarely, in pegmatites.

Crystal description

Often occurs in well-formed bipyramidal crystals, often with a sliver of asymmetrical truncation (third-order form) on the left side of the pyramid. The crystals may be small and brilliant or fairly large, even to 3 or 4 in. (15 cm). Transparent white and amber crystals suitable for cutting into gemstones have been found. Also in grains embedded in rock, without regular external form.

Physical properties

White, clove brown, light green (cuproscheelite). Lister adamantine; hardness 4Ɖ-5; specific gravity 5.9-6.1; streak white; fracture uneven; cleavage 3, pyramidal best. Translucent to transparent; most specimens are fluorescent (shortwave ultraviolet) blue, from high tungsten, to white or yellow (depending upon molybdenum content).

Composition

Calcium tungstate, usually with some of the tungsten replaced by molybdenum (19.5% CaO, 80.5% WO 3 ).

Tests

Tests are rarely necessary, since the fluorescence in ultraviolet light is the recognized method of prospecting. A gravity test and the blue tungsten test mentioned under wolframite (preceding) may be given, but yellow precipitate and coating obtained by simply boiling a powder in hydrochloric acid are usually sufficient.

Distinguishing characteristics

The fluorescence may be confusing, especially when it becomes whitish or yellow from molybdenum substitution, but density and hardness differentiate it from fluorescent fluorite and the crystals are so common that they will often be seen.

Occurrence

Most frequently found in contact-metamorphic deposits, where granitic rocks have intruded an impure limestone and the heat and gases have caused the typical minerals of this occurrence to form. Associates will be garnet, epidote, and vesuvianite. Scheelite should always be considered likely under these circumstances; check with shortwave ultraviolet. It will also be found in high-temperature quartz veins, often in crystals associated with cassiterite, topaz, fluorite, wolframite, and apatite.

Good crystals have been found at many localities, particularly at Bishop and Atolia, California, and in Mohave and Cochise Cos., Arizona. Interesting crystals and replacements of wolframite after scheelite crystals have been found at Trumbull, Connecticut. Most of the once commercially important Mill City, Nevada, scheelite was in grains embedded in a very compact rock. Gemmy, orange-brown crystals have been found in Sonora, Mexico, with black tourmaline (dravite) and elongated white apatite prisms.

Foreign localities of note include Malaga, Spain; Slavkov (Schlaggenwald, Bohemia), Czechoslovakia; and Tong Wha, South Korea. It was abundant in n. Brazil in metamorphic formations with vesuvianite. A seemingly secondary cool-water type of deposit has been found in a n. Mexico source where the scheelite is later than chrysocolla.

Remarks

An important ore of tungsten and, as a result of prospecting with ultraviolet light, has been discovered at many localities where it was not previously recognized. Resembles quartz when seen in the rock and probably has often not been recognized. Readily synthesized, melting congruently.



Wikipedia: Scheelite
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Scheelite
General
Category Mineral
Chemical formula Calcium tungstate - CaWO4
Identification
Color Golden yellow, brownish green, brown, pinkish to reddish gray, colorless
Crystal habit Pseudo-octahedra, massive, columnar, granular
Crystal system Tetragonal
Cleavage Distinct, two directions
Fracture Subconchoidal to uneven - brittle
Mohs Scale hardness 4.5-5
Luster Vitreous to adamantine
Streak White
Specific gravity 5.9–6.1
Refractive index 1.918–1.937
Birefringence +0.016
Pleochroism Definite dichoric in yellow (yellow to orange-brown)
Fusibility With difficulty
Solubility Soluble in acids

Scheelite is a calcium tungstate mineral with the chemical formula CaWO4. It is an important ore of tungsten. Well-formed crystals are sought by collectors and are occasionally fashioned into gemstones when suitably free of flaws. Scheelite has been synthesized via the Czochralski process; the material produced may be used to imitate diamond, as a scintillator, or as a solid state lasing medium.

Contents

Properties

Its crystals are in the tetragonal crystal system, appearing as dipyramidal pseudo-octahedra. Colors include golden yellow, brownish green to dark brown, pinkish to reddish gray, and colorless. Transparency ranges from translucent to transparent and crystal faces are highly lustrous (vitreous to adamantine). Scheelite possesses distinct cleavage and its fracture may be subconchoidal to uneven. Its specific gravity is high at 5.9–6.1 and its hardness is low at 4.5–5.[1] Aside from pseudo-octahedra, scheelite may be columnar, granular, tabular or massive in habit. Twinning is also commonly observed and crystal faces may be striated. Scheelite streaks white and is brittle.

Gems cut from transparent material are fragile yet attractive: Scheelite's refractive index (1.918–1.937 uniaxial positive, with a maximum birefringence of 0.016) and dispersion (0.026) are both moderately high. These factors combine to result in scheelite's high lustre and perceptible "fire", approaching that of diamond. Owing to low hardness, however, cut scheelites are best enjoyed unset as valuable collector's pieces.

Rockhounds treasure scheelite for its fluorescent properties: under shortwave ultraviolet light, the mineral glows a bright sky-blue. The presence of molybdenum trace impurities occasionally results in a green glow.

Composition

The scheelite structure consists of isolated tetrahedra. The tetrahedra form (non touching) 1D chains. There are two directions that the "chains" line up. Tungsten deposits only occur where mineralization has taken place at high temperatures and pressures. Research shows these were deposited mostly between 200 to 500 degrees Celsius, and from 200 to 1,500 bars.[2]

Special Characteristics

Scheelite is often found to have a grayish white color; yellowish, brownish or translucent. Its streak is white. Scheelite has a greasy luster which helps distinguish it. Moreover, when looking for scheelite, miners use ultraviolet light which causes it to fluoresce with a bright blue color. Many prospectors for scheelite have made good use of scheelite's typically bright blue fluorescence by searching for scheelite deposits by night with ultraviolet lamps. Many old mines have even been reopened after examination of the mine shafts with ultraviolet lamps have proven that the ore is not quite yet exhausted.

Synthetics

Although it is now uncommon as a diamond imitation—much more convincing products, like cubic zirconia and moissanite have long since superseded it—synthetic scheelite is occasionally offered as natural scheelite, and collectors may thus be fooled into paying high prices for them. Gemmologists distinguish natural scheelite from synthetic material mainly by microscopic examination: Natural material is very seldom without internal growth features and inclusions (imperfections), while synthetic material is usually very clean. Distinctly artificial curved striae and clouds of minute gas bubbles may also be obvserved in synthetic scheelite.

The visible absorption spectrum of scheelite, as seen by a hand-held (direct vision) spectroscope, may also be of use: Most natural stones show a number of faint absorption lines in the yellow region of the spectrum (~585 nm) due to praseodymium and neodymium trace impurities. Conversely, synthetic scheelite is often without such a spectrum. Some synthetics may however be doped with neodymium or other rare earth elements, but the spectrum produced is unlike that of natural stones.

History

Scheelite was named in 1821 after Carl Wilhelm Scheele (1742-1786).[3] The Swedish chemist and apothecary, proved the existence of tungstic oxide in the mineral in 1781. Born in Stralsund, Pomerania, he grew up studying chemistry. He then opened a pharmacy where he continued his research and soon made many original discoveries. Some of the papers he wrote were related to many important minerals today such as quartz, alum and clay. He also made many important discoveries not related to minerals such as lactic acid being the source of the acidity of sour milk. His discovery in 1781 was probably his call to fame, where a mineral was named after him. This discovery was about the composition of the mineral Tungsten, later called Scheelite (Calcium Tungstate). From this he obtained tungstic acid, which he is also famous for discovering.

References

  1. ^ University of Arizona State Bureau of Mines. (1975) Bulletin 182, p. 81
  2. ^ Lindgren, W. (1933) Ore deposits of the western states lindgren, pp. 518, 535
  3. ^ Klein, C. (2002) The Manual of Mineral Science 23, p. 426
  • Anderson, B. W., Jobbins, E. A. (Ed.) (1990). Gem testing. Butterworth & Co Ltd, Great Britain. ISBN 0-408-02320-1
  • Lindgren, W. (1933) Ore deposits of the western states lindgren, 518, 535, 555.
  • University of Arizona State Bureau of Mines. (1975) Bulletin 182, 80-81.
  • Mineral Galleries
  • Webmineral

 
 
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Rock & Mineral Guide. Peterson Field Guide to Rocks and Minerals, by Frederick H. Pough. Copyright © 1998 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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