CALCITE
Specimen cal-69
$ 60.00Dims: 3.7" x 1.8" x 1.2" (9.4 x 4.6 x 3.0 cm)
Wt: 2.49 oz. (70.6 g)
1100 foot level, 106 drift, Brushy Creek Mine, Reynolds County, Missouri, U.S.A.
This Brushy Creek specimen consists of a crust made up of several scalenohedral "dogtooth" Calcite crystals that have excellent form and show very little damage. The largest of these crystals measures 1.3 x 0.8 x 0.5" (3.3 x 2.0 x 1.3 cm), and like several others, has smooth, clean faces (that show a bright, pearly luster), well-defined edges, and a gray coloration that is caused by phantom inclusions of tiny marcasite crystals. Other crystals in the cluster, however, are covered with larger marcasite crystals that sparkle with a metallic luster and show subtle tinges of red, yellow, and green iridescence. As far as we know, the Brushy Creek locality in the midwestern U.S. is the only locality where material of this type is found.