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CELESTITE CLUSTER

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CELESTITE CLUSTER

A beautiful Celestite Cluster!  Great colour and form with a striking, perfect crystal in the middle of the cluster.   This is a very nice specimen of this mineral.  Blue is always popular in stones and this has a particularly nice hue.  This mineral is also known as Celestine.   You may notice it has the same crystal shape as Topaz.  Spoil yourself, or someone like you!

Dimensions:
8.4cm x 9.7cm x 5cm, 592g.

Location:
Majunga, Madagascar.

Formula: SrSO4
Baryte Group. Baryte-Celestine Series.  The strontium analogue of Baryte.  By far the most common strontium mineral.  Named in 1799 by Abraham Gottlieb Werner from the Greek “celestis,” for celestial, in allusion to the faint blue color of the original specimen.

 

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CELESTITE CLUSTERCELESTITE CLUSTER

A beautiful Celestite Cluster!  Great colour and form with a striking, perfect crystal in the middle of the cluster.   This is a very nice specimen of this mineral.  Blue is always popular in stones and this has a particularly nice hue.  Celestite is also known as Celestine.   You may notice it has the same crystal shape as Topaz.  Spoil yourself, or someone like you!

Dimensions:
8.4cm x 9.7cm x 5cm, 592g.

Location:
Majunga, Madagascar.

Strontium Sulfate:  SrSO4.

Celestite is the new name for Celestine and is a favorite among mineral collectors. Its sky blue (or celestial) color is very pretty, and is unique in the mineral kingdom. Celestite also forms with other colorful minerals, making very nice combinations. Blue Celestite with bright yellow sulfur is one of the most famous colorful combinations of minerals.

Celestite has the same structure as Barite (BaSO4), and forms very similar crystals. The two may seem identical by ordinary methods, but a flame test can distinguish them. By scraping the dust of the crystals into a gas flame, the color of the flame will confirm the identity of the crystal. If the flame is a pale green, it is barite, but if the flame is red, it is celestite. The flame test works because the elements barium (Ba) and strontium (Sr) react with the flame and produce those colors. Normally barite is not blue, but many specimens of blue barite are often misidentified as celestite. The nice crystals, good luster and attractive blue color make fine specimens of celestite an outstanding mineral for someone’s cabinet or display case.

 

 

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