CALCITE
Specimen cal-42
$ 30.00Dims: 2.7" x 2.7" x 1.2" (6.9 x 6.9 x 3.0 cm)
Wt: 3.75 oz. (106.4 g)
1100 foot level, 106 Drift, Brushy Creek Mine, Reynolds County, Missouri, U.S.A.
A few intergrown, misshapen Calcite crystals make up this specimen from the American midwest. They are in the form of scalenohedrons, and the two largest crystals form a base-to-base twin that has dimensions of 2.7 x 1.2 x 1.0" (6.9 x 3.0 x 2.5 cm). They have little visible damage, though one crystal is cleaved cleanly off of the base of another, where it had formed another base-to-base twin. Their form is good, though misshapen, with well-defined edges and faces that show heavy growth-related striations and a pearly luster. The crystals are dimly transparent and have a dull yellow coloration, but appear gray due to subtle phantoming that occurs just below each one's surface. These phantoms consist of layers of microscopic marcasite crystals. There are some much larger, exposed marcasites on the specimen's edge that are colored red and blue, with their standard metallic luster.