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Citrine gemstone
Citrine gemstone

Citrine gemstone

Citrine gemstone

A species of Citrine, Also known as Prasiolite

Citrine gemstone is a magnesium-aluminum species of the Garnet group of minerals. Its rich red color identifies Citrine gemstone and makes it a popular stone in rings, necklaces, and other types of jewelry. Ancient Egyptians used the stone for ceremonial and decorative purposes, as the Romans did. "Pyrope" is a Greek word that accurately describes the stone. It translates to "fiery eye", a reference to its color.

General Info About Citrine gemstone

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Physical Properties of Citrine gemstone

Streak
White
qrcode
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Chemical Properties of Citrine gemstone

Formula
SiO2
Elements listed
O, Si

Optical Properties of Citrine gemstone

Refractive Index
1.544-1.553
Birefringence
0.009
Pleochroism
Natural stones - Weak: yellow, light yellow; Heat-treated stones - None
Dispersion
0.013
Optical Character
Biaxial positive

Characteristics of Citrine gemstone

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Cultural Significance of Citrine gemstone

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Healing Properties of Citrine gemstone

Citrine gemstone is believed to provide powerful healing energy to help manifest abundance and wealth. It brings happiness and joy to many users and provides a positive energy force to relieve fear, negativity, and anxiety. It purportedly also offers clarity of thought and improves mental translucence.

Citrine gemstone as a Birthstone

Citrine gemstone is one of the birthstones for November. Its vibrant color has long been associated with the sun, and for this reason, it has come to symbolize vitality and energy. For many years this captivating stone was believed to attract wealth and abundance, making it a real treasure for those born in November.

Common Questions People Also Ask

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Tumbled rhodochrosite tumbled has a color range between pink and deep red, with white swirls that make it look like a 'Strawberries and Cream' candy. The best examples of rhodochrosite tumbled are found in Argentina, though it is also mined in the USA, Romania, and South Africa. It is made into cabochons and carved into ornamental items.
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Painite
Painite is a very rare borate mineral. It was first found in Myanmar by British mineralogist and gem dealer Arthur C.D. Pain who misidentified it as ruby, until it was discovered as a new gemstone in the 1950s. When it was confirmed as a new mineral species, the mineral was named after him. Due to its rarity, painite can cost in the range of between US$50,000 to $60,000 per carat. The chemical makeup of painite contains calcium, zirconium, boron, aluminium and oxygen (CaZrAl9O15(BO3)). The mineral also contains trace amounts of chromium and vanadium, which are responsible for Painite's typically orange-red to brownish-red color, similar to topaz. The mineral's rarity is due to the fact that zirconium and boron rarely interact with each other in nature. The crystals are naturally hexagonal in shape, and, until late 2004, only two had been cut into faceted gemstones.
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Sylvite
Sylvite, or sylvine, is potassium chloride (KCl) in natural mineral form. It forms crystals in the isometric system very similar to normal rock salt, halite (NaCl). The two are, in fact, isomorphous. Sylvite is colorless to white with shades of yellow and red due to inclusions. It has a Mohs hardness of 2.5 and a specific gravity of 1.99. It has a refractive index of 1.4903. Sylvite has a salty taste with a distinct bitterness. Sylvite is one of the last evaporite minerals to precipitate out of solution. As such, it is only found in very dry saline areas. Its principal use is as a potassium fertilizer. Sylvite is found in many evaporite deposits worldwide. Massive bedded deposits occur in New Mexico and western Texas, and in Utah in the US, but the largest world source is in Saskatchewan, Canada. The vast deposits in Saskatchewan, Canada were formed by the evaporation of a Devonian seaway. Sylvite is the official mineral of Saskatchewan. Sylvite was first described in 1832 at Mount Vesuvius near Napoli in Italy and named for the Dutch chemist, François Sylvius de le Boe (1614–1672). Sylvite, along with quartz, fluorite and halite, is used for spectroscopic prisms and lenses.
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Lizardite
Népouite is a rare nickel silicate mineral which has the apple green colour typical of such compounds. It was named by E Glasser in 1907 after the place where it was first described (the type locality), the Népoui Mine, Népoui, Nouméa Commune, North Province, New Caledonia. The ideal formula is Ni3(Si2O5)(OH)4, but most specimens contain some magnesium, and (Ni,Mg)3(Si2O5)(OH)4 is more realistic. There is a similar mineral called lizardite (named after the Lizard Complex in Cornwall, England) in which all of the nickel is replaced by magnesium, formula Mg3(Si2O5)(OH)4. These two minerals form a series; intermediate compositions are possible, with varying proportions of nickel to magnesium. Pecoraite is another rare mineral with the same chemical formula as népouite, but a different structure; such minerals are said to be dimorphs of each other, in the same way as graphite is a dimorph of diamond. Népouite, lizardite and pecoraite are all members of the kaolinite-serpentine group. Garnierite is a green nickel ore that formed as a result of weathering of ultramafic rocks, and that occurs in many nickel deposits worldwide. It is a mixture of various nickel and magnesium phyllosilicates (sheet silicates), including népouite. Associated minerals include calcite, chlorite, goethite, halloysite, nontronite, pimelite, quartz, sepiolite, serpentine, talc and willemseite. As well as the type locality in New Caledonia, it has been found in Australia, Austria, the Czech Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Germany, Greece, Italy, Japan, Morocco, Poland, Russia, South Africa and the US.
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