Great South Gems & Minerals
• Smokey Quartz Crystals • (Arkansas)
• Smokey Quartz Crystals • (Arkansas)
Chalcedony - Agate - Onyx - Jasper - Aventurine - Tiger's Eye - Rock crystal - Amethyst - Citrine - Prasiolite - Rose Quartz - Milk Quartz - Smoky Quartz - Morion - Carnelian - Chert - Flint
A very dark smokey quartz, almost black (treated) - individual crystals and crystal clusters available.
Quartz is the second most common mineral in the earth's
crust. Quartz is a silicon dioxide. If you were to take the metal
silicon, plus oxygen, plus a little time and pressure - you'd get a
quartz crystals. Quartz is 7 on the Mohs hardness scale, harder than
a steel knife blade.
Quartz belongs to the rhombohedral crystal
system. Quartz crystals are a six-sided prism terminating with
a six -sided pyramid at one end. In nature, quartz crystals are
often twinned, distorted, or so inter grown with adjacent crystals
of quartz or of other minerals as to only show part of a individual
crystals shape, these groupings of the quartz points are called
crystal
clusters. Regardless of the shape or size of a quartz crystal,
it always has six sides. It's not uncommon for the quartz crystals
to have more than one stage or "growth" or formation. In quartz
crystals where there has been two or more stages of formation
unusual crystals are produced. There is the crystal that forms
to a certain stage and then later, silicon dioxide forms a coating
on the outside of the original crystal. These specimens are called
spirit quartz. Then there is the quartz crystal where a crystal
has formed and then a second stage of growth/formation causes
the silicon dioxide to form at the top of the crystal, extending
the length of the overall crystal. These are called scepter quartz
crystals. This type formation is some times called phantom quartz
crystal, where you can actually see what looks like smaller crystal
inside a larger quartz crystal. Neat, huh! Then there are those
quartz crystals that have inclusions in them. This occurs during
the formation stage. The most common type of inclusions are water
bubbles, called anhydrous, and the quartz crystals with rutile
inside that looks like hairs that got caught in the formation
stage.
Quartz crystals form in hydrothermal veins and pegmatites. Well
formed quartz crystals may reach several feet in length and weigh
literally hundreds of pounds. The Ouachita Mountains in western
Arkansas is often referred to as the Quartz Crystal Capitol of the
world. Beautiful super clear quartz crystals have been mined in the
Ouachita Mountains for industrial and commercial use for many
years. Mt. Ida, a small town in Arkansas, supplied clear quartz
crystals to the US Military be used in electronic equipment, such as
tanks, back during the second world war. These super-clear quartz
crystals are used today as "seed quartz" by laboratories in producing
quartz wafers used in all types electronics including watches and the
computer industry.
Quartz, in all its varieties has a conchoidal type fracture, or a
cone shape type fracture. Early man took note of this fact thousands
of years ago and learned to shape quartz type rocks in many different
shapes. Early man made stone knives, spear points, arrowheads,
scraper stones, drill stones, and a host of other items. Early man
found that with the use on quartz stones, they could shape the
stones, through flaking the stones, and could gather their food,
build their lodges with animal skins, make scrapers to clean animal
skins to be used as clothing and many other uses. It's a fact that
the human race advanced as rapidly as it did through man learning to
use stones, altered into many different shapes for tools and weapons.
Quartz goes by many names: Chalcedony, Agate, Onyx, Jasper,
Aventurine, Tiger's Eye, Rock crystal, Amethyst, Citrine, Prasiolite,
Rose Quartz, Milk Quartz, Smoky Quartz, Morion, Carnelian, Chert, Flint.
| M208 Smokey Quartz Crystals (Arkansas) |
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