CHALCANTHITE
Specimen clc-2
$ 27.00Dims: 3.2 x 2.7 x 1.2" (8.1 x 6.9 x 3.0 cm)
Wt: 3.81 oz. (108.0 g)
Bertha Mine, Dugway District, Tooele County, Utah, U.S.A.
Dozens of slightly curved Chalcanthite crystals rest on the brown host rock of this hand specimen. These crystals appear to be in moderately good condition and reach lengths of 0.5" (1.3 cm), though many of them are smaller than that. All have what appears to be a triclinic prismatic form, but their general habit most closely resembles that of "ram's horn" selenite. All have a bright royal-blue coloration and a silky luster along their prism lengths, and one or two may even have natural cryastalline terminations. All are at least translucent, and a few of the better-formed, thinner crystals may be dimly transparent. The base rock is unusual in the fact that many tiny pyrite and chalcopyrite crystals are embedded in its underside. Like the previous specimen, this piece was most likely formed through an evaporation mining process.