Deep Purple-Red.
That is the correct spelling of "almandine" (the gemstone, a garnet, also known as almandite).
Yes, garnet may also be referred to as carbuncle, almandine, pyrope, spessartite, grossular, andradite, and uvarovite, depending on its color and composition.
Almandine garnet.
An almandine is a variety of garnet with a deep red colour, with the chemical formula Fe3Al2(SiO4)3.
An almandine is a variety of garnet with a deep red colour, with the chemical formula Fe3Al2(SiO4)3.
The deep red variety of garnet is commonly known as Almandine garnet.
There are a number of gem stones that are red in color including ruby, garnet, amethyst, almandine, pyrope, and rubellite.
red - pyrope garnet, spessartine, almandine yellow - mali, andradite green - tsavorite, grossular garnet, uvarovite, demantoid orange - mandarin garnet, spessartite(spessartine), hessonite brown- spessarite, hessonite, andradite blue, purple - color-change garnet
Almandine
Star garnets are so rare that thus far they have only been found in two places in the world: in the state of Idaho in the USA, and in India. The garnet varieties that occasionally exhibit asterism are almandine and a mixture of almandine and pyrope garnet.
Vermelho Garnet is found in Mozambique, an exotic land far away on the eastern coast of Africa. A myriad of incredible gemstones and minerals. Among its treasures is the beautiful Vermelho Garnet, which features a rich combination of both the Pyrope Garnet as well as the Almandine Garnet species. The Pyrope garnet portion gives the stone its regal red color, while the Almandine garnet brings the warm spicy shades of cinnamon. This spicy gemstone originates from a region known as Zambezia and is called Vermelho Garnet, meaning "red" in Portuguese, one of the official languages of this exotic country.
Silicates