"The Mineral Heulandite"

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HEULANDITE:

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:

Color is colorless, white, gray, green, pink, yellow, red, brown and black.

Luster is vitreous to pearly on the most prominent pinacoid face and on cleavage surfaces.

Transparency: Crystals are transparent but most commonly translucent.

Crystal System is monoclinic; 2/m

Crystal Habits include blocky crystals described as diamond-shaped, trapezoidal and old fashioned coffin shape with the two faces of a pinacoid usually prominent. Crystals are often modified by secondary faces with pairs of triangular faces very common. Prismatic and acicular forms are also known and are difficult to identify as heulandite. In aggregate specimens this face can be oriented upward producing a crust of curved pearly faces or it can be oriented to the side where the tops of the crystals jut out like the roof tops of a suburban community. Crystals can be simple or complexly modified by a variety of prism and pinacoid faces.

Cleavage is perfect in one direction parellel to the prominent pinacoid face.

Fracture is uneven.

Hardness is 3.5 - 4, maybe softer on cleavage surfaces.

Specific Gravity is approximately 2.1 - 2.3 (very light due to the open channels and high water content).

Streak is white.

Associated Minerals are extensive and include quartz, calcite, apophyllite, barite, pyrite, prehnite, pollucite, tourmaline, scolecite, analcime, chabazite, ferrierite, mordenite, laumontite, natrolite, stilbite and other zeolites.

Notable Occurrences are wide spread and include Poona and Nasik Districts, India; Iceland; New Jersey; Washington; Boron, California; Patterson, New Jersey; Arizona and Oregon, USA; Nova Scotia and Quebec, Canada; Iran; Sardinia, Italy; Rio Grande do Sul and Goias, Brazil; New South Wales and Phillip Island, Victoria, Australia; New Zealand; Kola Peninsula, Russia; Scotland and Rhone Valley, Switzerland.

Best Field Indicators are crystal habit, density, cleavage, luster and associations.

Heulandite is one of the most common and one of the most well known members of the Zeolite Group. It can have a nice pearly luster and lovely colored hues. It forms wonderfully complex and quite unique crystals and is often associated with other rare and beautiful minerals. Rarely are the larger crystals transparent, but they always have a certain depth of translucency. Heulandite forms large crystals in the petrified bubbles (called vesicles) of volcanic rocks that have had a slight amount of metamorphism. Huelandite occurs in other environments but does not generally form large well shaped crystals in those situations. Heulandite gets its name in honor of John Henry Heuland, a British mineral collector and dealer.

Heulandite's structure is sheet-like. Although still a true tectosilicate where every oxygen is connected to either a silicon or an aluminum ion (at a ratio of [Al + Si]/O = 1/2) and the structure is a framework, there still is a sheet-like structural organization. The sheets are connected to each other by a few bonds that are relatively widely separated from each other. The sheets contain open rings of alternating eight and ten sides. These rings stack together from sheet to sheet to form channels throughout the crystal structure. The size of these channels controls the size of the molecules or ions that can pass through them and therefore a zeolite like heulandite can act as a chemical sieve, allowing some ions to pass through while blocking others. A zeolite can be thought of in terms of a house, where the structure of the house (the doors, windows, walls and roof) is the zeolite while the furniture and people are the water, ammonia and other molecules and ions that can pass in and out of the structure. In the case of heulandite, the sheet-like structure could be analogous to the floors of a high-rise office building with only a few braces between the floors. Heulandite's sheet-like structure produces the prominent pinacoid faces, the perfect cleavage and the unique luster on those faces.

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