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Tourmaline

Tourmaline (/ˈtʊərməlɪn, -ˌln/ TOOR-mə-lin, -⁠leen) is a crystalline silicate mineral group in which boron is compounded with elements such as aluminium, iron, magnesium, sodium, lithium, or potassium. This gemstone comes in a wide variety of colors.

Tourmaline
General
CategoryCyclosilicate
Formula
(repeating unit)
(Ca,K,Na, )(Al,Fe,Li,Mg,Mn)3(Al,Cr,Fe,V)6
(BO3)3(Si,Al,B)6O18(OH,F)4
[1][2]
IMA symbolTur[3]
Crystal systemTrigonal
Crystal classDitrigonal pyramidal (3m)
H-M symbol: (3m)
Space groupR3m (no. 160)
Identification
ColorMost commonly black, but can range from colorless to brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, pink, or hues in-between. It can also be bi-colored, or even tri-colored. Rarely, it can be found as neon green or electric blue.
Crystal habitParallel and elongated; acicular prisms, sometimes radiating; massive; scattered grains (in granite)
CleavageIndistinct
FractureUneven, small conchoidal
TenacityBrittle
Mohs scale hardness7.0–7.5
LusterVitreous, sometimes resinous
StreakWhite
DiaphaneityTranslucent to opaque
Specific gravity3.06+0.20–0.06[1]
Density2.82–3.32
Polish lusterVitreous[1]
Optical propertiesDouble-refractive, uniaxial negative[1]
Refractive indexnω = 1.635–1.675
nε = 1.610–1.650
Birefringence−0.018 to −0.040; typically about −0.020 but in dark stones it may reach −0.040[1]
Pleochroism
  • Typically moderate to strong[1]
  • Red: definite; dark red, light red
  • Green: strong; dark green, yellow-green
  • Brown: definite; dark brown, light brown
  • Blue: strong; dark blue, light blue
Dispersion0.017[1]
Ultraviolet fluorescencePink stones; inert to very weak red to violet in long and short wave[1]
Absorption spectraStrong narrow band at 498 nm, and almost complete absorption of red down to 640 nm in blue and green stones; red and pink stones show lines at 458 and 451 nm, as well as a broad band in the green spectrum[1]
Main tourmaline producing countries

The name is derived from the Sinhalese tōramalli (ටෝරමල්ලි), which refers to the carnelian gemstones.[4]

History edit

Brightly colored Ceylonese gem tourmalines were brought to Europe in great quantities by the Dutch East India Company to satisfy a demand for curiosities and gems. Tourmaline was sometimes called the "Ceylonese Magnet" because it could attract and then repel hot ashes due to its pyroelectric properties.[5]

Tourmalines were used by chemists in the 19th century to polarize light by shining rays onto a cut and polished surface of the gem.[6]

Species and varieties edit

Commonly encountered species and varieties of tourmaline include the following:

  • Schorl species
    • Brownish-black to black—schorl
  • Dravite species (from the Drave district of Carinthia)
    • Dark yellow to brownish-black—dravite
  • Elbaite species (named after the island of Elba, Italy)
    • Red or pinkish-red—rubellite variety
    • Light blue to bluish-green—indicolite variety (from indigo)
    • Green—verdelite or emerald variety
    • Colorless—achroite variety (from Ancient Greek άχρωμος (ákhrōmos) 'colorless')

Schorl edit

 
A single stark green fluorite isolated on top of schorl crystals
 
Schorl, magnified 10×

The most common species of tourmaline is schorl, the sodium iron (divalent) endmember of the group. It may account for 95% or more of all tourmaline in nature. The early history of the mineral schorl shows that the name "schorl" was in use prior to 1400 because a village known today as Zschorlau (in Saxony, Germany) was then named "Schorl" (or minor variants of this name), and the village had a nearby tin mine where, in addition to cassiterite, black tourmaline was found. The first description of schorl with the name "schürl" and its occurrence (various tin mines in the Ore Mountains) was written by Johannes Mathesius (1504–1565) in 1562 under the title "Sarepta oder Bergpostill".[7] Up to about 1600, additional names used in the German language were "Schurel", "Schörle", and "Schurl". Beginning in the 18th century, the name Schörl was mainly used in the German-speaking area. In English, the names shorl and shirl were used in the 18th century. In the 19th century the names common schorl, schörl, schorl and iron tourmaline were the English words used for this mineral.[7]

Dravite edit

 
Black dravite on a grey matrix

Dravite, also called brown tourmaline, is the sodium magnesium rich tourmaline endmember. Uvite, in comparison, is a calcium magnesium tourmaline. Dravite forms multiple series, with other tourmaline members, including schorl and elbaite.[8]

The name dravite was used for the first time by Gustav Tschermak (1836–1927), Professor of Mineralogy and Petrography at the University of Vienna, in his book Lehrbuch der Mineralogie (published in 1884) for magnesium-rich (and sodium-rich) tourmaline from village Dobrova near Unterdrauburg in the Drava river area, Carinthia, Austro-Hungarian Empire. Today this tourmaline locality (type locality for dravite) at Dobrova (near Dravograd), is a part of the Republic of Slovenia.[9] Tschermak gave this tourmaline the name dravite, for the Drava river area, which is the district along the Drava River (in German: Drau, in Latin: Drave) in Austria and Slovenia. The chemical composition which was given by Tschermak in 1884 for this dravite approximately corresponds to the formula NaMg3(Al,Mg)6B3Si6O27(OH), which is in good agreement (except for the OH content) with the endmember formula of dravite as known today.[9]

Dravite varieties include the deep green chromium dravite and the vanadium dravite.[10]

Elbaite edit

 
Elbaite with quartz and lepidolite on cleavelandite

A lithium-tourmaline elbaite was one of three pegmatitic minerals from Utö, Sweden, in which the new alkali element lithium (Li) was determined in 1818 by Johan August Arfwedson for the first time.[11] Elba Island, Italy, was one of the first localities where colored and colorless Li-tourmalines were extensively chemically analysed. In 1850 Karl Friedrich August Rammelsberg described fluorine (F) in tourmaline for the first time. In 1870 he proved that all varieties of tourmaline contain chemically bound water. In 1889 Scharitzer proposed the substitution of (OH) by F in red Li-tourmaline from Sušice, Czech Republic. In 1914 Vladimir Vernadsky proposed the name Elbait for lithium-, sodium-, and aluminum-rich tourmaline from Elba Island, Italy, with the simplified formula (Li,Na)HAl6B2Si4O21.[11] Most likely the type material for elbaite was found at Fonte del Prete, San Piero in Campo, Campo nell'Elba, Elba Island, Province of Livorno, Tuscany, Italy.[11] In 1933 Winchell published an updated formula for elbaite, H8Na2Li3Al3B6Al12Si12O62, which is commonly used to date written as Na(Li1.5Al1.5)Al6(BO3)3[Si6O18](OH)3(OH).[11] The first crystal structure determination of a Li-rich tourmaline was published in 1972 by Donnay and Barton, performed on a pink elbaite from San Diego County, California, United States.[citation needed]

Chemical composition edit

 
Elbaite

The tourmaline mineral group is chemically one of the most complicated groups of silicate minerals. Its composition varies widely because of isomorphous replacement (solid solution), and its general formula can be written as XY3Z6(T6O18)(BO3)3V3W, where:[12]

The 39 minerals in the group (endmember formulas) recognized by the International Mineralogical Association
Species Name Ideal Endmember Formula IMA Number Symbol
Adachiite CaFe2+3Al6(Si5AlO18)(BO3)3(OH)3OH 2012-101 Adc
Alumino-oxy-rossmanite ▢Al3Al6(Si5AlO18)(BO3)3(OH)3O 2020-008 Aorsm
Bosiite NaFe3+3(Al4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2014-094 Bos
Celleriite ▢(Mn2+2Al)Al6(Si6O18)(BO3)3(OH)3(OH) 2019-089 Cll
Chromium-dravite NaMg3Cr6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1982-055 Cdrv
Chromo-alumino-povondraite NaCr3(Al4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2013-089 Capov
Darrellhenryite NaLiAl2Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2012-026 Dhry
Dravite NaMg3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1884[a] Drv
Dutrowite Na(Fe2.5Ti0.5)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2019-082 Dtw
Elbaite Na(Li1.5,Al1.5)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1913[a] Elb
Ferro-bosiite NaFe3+3(Al4Fe2+2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2022-069 Fbos
Feruvite CaFe2+3(MgAl5)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1987-057 Fer
Fluor-buergerite NaFe3+3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3O3F 1965-005 Fbu
Fluor-dravite NaMg3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 2009-089 Fdrv
Fluor-elbaite Na(Li1.5,Al1.5)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 2011-071 Felb
Fluor-liddicoatite Ca(Li2Al)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 1976-041 Fld
Fluor-schorl NaFe2+3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 2010-067 Fsrl
Fluor-tsilaisite NaMn2+3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 2012-044 Ftl
Fluor-uvite CaMg3(Al5Mg)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3F 1930[a] Fluvt
Foitite ▢(Fe2+2Al)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1992-034 Foi
Lucchesiite Ca(Fe2+)3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2015-043 Lcc
Magnesio-dutrowite Na(Mg2.5Ti0.5)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2023-015 Mdtw
Magnesio-foitite ▢(Mg2Al)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1998-037 Mfoi
Magnesio-lucchesite Ca(Mg3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2019-025 Mlcc
Maruyamaite K(MgAl2)(Al5Mg)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2013-123 Mry
Olenite NaAl3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3O3OH 1985-006 Ole
Oxy-chromium-dravite NaCr3(Mg2Cr4)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2011-097 Ocdrv
Oxy-dravite Na(Al2Mg)(Al5Mg)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2012-004 Odrv
Oxy-foitite ▢(Fe2+Al2)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2016-069 Ofoi
Oxy-schorl Na(Fe2+2Al)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2011-011 Osrl
Oxy-vanadium-dravite NaV3(V4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 1999-050 Ovdrv
Povondraite NaFe3+3(Fe3+4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 1979[b] Pov
Princivalleite Na(Mn2Al)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2020-056 Pva
Rossmanite ▢(LiAl2)Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1996-018 Rsm
Schorl NaFe2+3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 1505[a] Srl
Tsilaisite NaMn2+3Al6Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 2011-047 Tsl
Uvite CaMg3(Al5Mg)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3OH 2000-030 Uvt
Vanadio-oxy-chromium-dravite NaV3(Cr4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2012-034 Vocdrv
Vanadio-oxy-dravite NaV3(Al4Mg2)Si6O18(BO3)3(OH)3O 2012-074 Vodrv
  1. ^ a b c d Name in existence before the IMA commission existed
  2. ^ Named 'ferridravite' in 1979; renamed to povondraite by the IMA in the 1990s

The IMA commission on new mineral names published a list of approved symbols for each mineral species in 2021.[13]

A revised nomenclature for the tourmaline group was published in 2011.[14][15][16]

Physical properties edit

Crystal structure edit

 
Tri-chromatic elbaite crystals on quartz, Himalaya Mine, San Diego Co., California, US

Tourmaline is a six-member ring cyclosilicate having a trigonal crystal system. It occurs as long, slender to thick prismatic and columnar crystals that are usually triangular in cross-section, often with curved striated faces. The style of termination at the ends of crystals is sometimes asymmetrical, called hemimorphism. Small slender prismatic crystals are common in a fine-grained granite called aplite, often forming radial daisy-like patterns. Tourmaline is distinguished by its three-sided prisms; no other common mineral has three sides. Prisms faces often have heavy vertical striations that produce a rounded triangular effect. Tourmaline is rarely perfectly euhedral. An exception was the fine dravite tourmalines of Yinnietharra, in western Australia. The deposit was discovered in the 1970s, but is now exhausted. All hemimorphic crystals are piezoelectric, and are often pyroelectric as well.[citation needed]

A crystal of tourmaline is built up of units consisting of a six-member silica ring that binds above to a large cation, such as sodium. The ring binds below to a layer of metal ions and hydroxyls or halogens, which structurally resembles a fragment of kaolin. This in turn binds to three triangular borate ions. Units joined end to end form columns running the length of the crystal. Each column binds with two other columns offset one-third and two-thirds of the vertical length of a single unit to form bundles of three columns. Bundles are packed together to form the final crystal structure. Because the neighboring columns are offset, the basic structural unit is not a unit cell: The actual unit cell of this structure includes portions of several units belonging to adjacent columns.[17][18]

Color edit

 
Two dark-green rectangular tourmaline stones and one oval tourmaline stone
 
Bi-chromatic tourmaline crystal, 0.8 inches (2 cm) long
 
Tourmaline mineral, approximately 10 cm (3.9 in) tall

Tourmaline has a variety of colors. Iron-rich tourmalines are usually black to bluish-black to deep brown, while magnesium-rich varieties are brown to yellow, and lithium-rich tourmalines are almost any color: blue, green, red, yellow, pink, etc. Rarely, it is colorless. Bi-colored and multicolored crystals are common, reflecting variations of fluid chemistry during crystallization. Crystals may be green at one end and pink at the other, or green on the outside and pink inside; this type is called watermelon tourmaline and is prized in jewelry. An excellent example of watermelon tourmaline jewelry is a brooch piece (1969, gold, watermelon tourmaline, diamonds) by Andrew Grima (British, b. Italy, 1921–2007), in the collection of Kimberly Klosterman and on display at the Cincinnati Art Museum.[19] Some forms of tourmaline are dichroic; they change color when viewed from different directions.[20]

The pink color of tourmalines from many localities is the result of prolonged natural irradiation. During their growth, these tourmaline crystals incorporated Mn2+ and were initially very pale. Due to natural gamma ray exposure from radioactive decay of 40K in their granitic environment, gradual formation of Mn3+ ions occurs, which is responsible for the deepening of the pink to red color.[21]

Magnetism edit

Opaque black schorl and yellow tsilaisite are idiochromatic tourmaline species that have high magnetic susceptibilities due to high concentrations of iron and manganese respectively. Most gem-quality tourmalines are of the elbaite species. Elbaite tourmalines are allochromatic, deriving most of their color and magnetic susceptibility from schorl (which imparts iron) and tsilaisite (which imparts manganese).[citation needed]

Red and pink tourmalines have the lowest magnetic susceptibilities among the elbaites, while tourmalines with bright yellow, green and blue colors are the most magnetic elbaites. Dravite species such as green chromium dravite and brown dravite are diamagnetic. A handheld neodymium magnet can be used to identify or separate some types of tourmaline gems from others. For example, blue indicolite tourmaline is the only blue gemstone of any kind that will show a drag response when a neodymium magnet is applied. Any blue tourmaline that is diamagnetic can be identified as paraiba tourmaline colored by copper in contrast to magnetic blue tourmaline colored by iron.[22]

Treatments edit

Some tourmaline gems, especially pink to red colored stones, are altered by heat treatment to improve their color. Overly dark red stones can be lightened by careful heat treatment. The pink color in manganese-containing near-colorless to pale pink stones can be greatly increased by irradiation with gamma-rays or electron beams. Irradiation is almost impossible to detect in tourmalines, and does not, currently, affect the value. Heavily included tourmalines, such as rubellite and Brazilian paraiba, are sometimes clarity-enhanced. A clarity-enhanced tourmaline (especially the paraiba variety) is worth much less than an untreated gem of equal clarity.[23]

Geology edit

Video of tourmaline ore

Tourmaline is found in granite and granite pegmatites and in metamorphic rocks such as schist and marble. Schorl and lithium-rich tourmalines are usually found in granite and granite pegmatite. Magnesium-rich tourmalines, dravites, are generally restricted to schists and marble. Tourmaline is a durable mineral and can be found in minor amounts as grains in sandstone and conglomerate, and is part of the ZTR index for highly weathered sediments.[24]

Localities edit

Gem and specimen tourmaline is mined chiefly in Brazil and many parts of Africa, including Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya, Madagascar, Mozambique, Malawi, and Namibia. It is also mined in Asia, notably in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Indonesia as well as in Sri Lanka and India,[25] where some placer material suitable for gem use is found.

United States edit

Some fine gems and specimen material have been produced in the United States, with the first discoveries in 1822, in the state of Maine. California became a large producer of tourmaline in the early 1900s. The Maine deposits tend to produce crystals in raspberry pink-red as well as minty greens. The California deposits are known for bright pinks, as well as bicolors. During the early 1900s, Maine and California were the world's largest producers of gem tourmalines. The Empress Dowager Cixi of China loved pink tourmaline and bought large quantities for gemstones and carvings from the then new Himalaya Mine, located in San Diego County, California.[26] It is not clear when the first tourmaline was found in California. Native Americans have used pink and green tourmaline as funeral gifts for centuries. The first documented case was in 1890 when Charles Russel Orcutt found pink tourmaline at what later became the Stewart Mine at Pala, California in San Diego County.[27]

Brazil edit

 
Watermelon Tourmaline mineral on quartz matrix (crystal approximately 2 cm (0.79 in) wide at face)

Almost every color of tourmaline can be found in Brazil, especially in the Brazilian states of Minas Gerais and Bahia. The new type of tourmaline, which soon became known as paraiba tourmaline, came in blue and green. Brazilian paraiba tourmaline usually contains abundant inclusions. Much of the paraiba tourmaline from Brazil does not actually comes from Paraíba, but the neighboring state of Rio Grande do Norte. Material from Rio Grande do Norte is often somewhat less intense in color, but many fine gems are found there. It was determined that the element copper was important in the coloration of the stone.[28]

A large bluish-green tourmaline from Paraiba, measuring 36.44 mm × 33.75 mm × 21.85 mm (1.43 in × 1.33 in × 0.86 in) and weighing 191.87 carats (1.3536 oz; 38.374 g), is the world's largest cut tourmaline.[29][30] Owned by Billionaire Business Enterprises,[29] it was presented in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, on 14 October 2009.[30]

Africa edit

 
Paraiba tourmaline from Mozambique

In the late 1990s, copper-containing tourmaline was found in Nigeria. The material was generally paler and less saturated than the Brazilian materials, although the material generally was much less included. A more recent African discovery from Mozambique has also produced tourmaline colored by copper, similar to the Brazilian paraiba. The Mozambique paraiba material usually is more intensely colored than the Nigerian and Mozambique Paraiba tourmaline have similar colors to the Brazilian Paraiba, but the prices are relatively cheaper, better clarity and larger sizes. In recent years the pricing of these beautiful gemstones have increased significantly.[31]

Another highly valuable variety is chrome tourmaline, a rare type of dravite tourmaline from Tanzania. Chrome tourmaline is a rich green color due to the presence of chromium atoms in the crystal. Of the standard elbaite colors, blue indicolite gems are typically the most valuable,[32] followed by green verdelite and pink to red rubellite.[33]

See also edit

  • Benjamin Wilson – experimented with the electrical properties of tourmaline

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i GIA Gem Reference Guide. Gemological Institute of America. 1995. ISBN 0-87311-019-6.
  2. ^ . Mindat.org. Archived from the original on 2005-12-28. Retrieved 2005-09-12. This website details specifically and clearly how the complicated chemical formula is structured.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  3. ^ Warr, L. N. (2021). "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols". Mineralogical Magazine. 85 (3): 291–320. Bibcode:2021MinM...85..291W. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43. S2CID 235729616.
  4. ^ "tourmaline". Oxford Dictionaries. from the original on October 16, 2021. Retrieved 2021-03-19.
  5. ^ Erhart, Jiri; Kittinger, Erwin; Prívratská, Jana (2010). Fundamentals of Piezoelectric Sensorics: Mechanical, Dielectric, and Thermodynamical Properties of Piezoelectric Materials. Springer. p. 4. ISBN 9783540684275.
  6. ^ Draper, John William (1861). A Textbook on chemistry. New York: Harper and Brothers. p. 93.
  7. ^ a b Ertl, 2006.
  8. ^ "What is Tourmaline? – GIA".
  9. ^ a b Ertl, 2007.
  10. ^ "Tourmaline Information – Gemstone Education".
  11. ^ a b c d Ertl, 2008.
  12. ^ Hawthorne, F.C. & Henry, D.J. (1999). "Classification of the minerals of the tourmaline group" 2007-10-16 at the Wayback Machine. European Journal of Mineralogy, 11, pp. 201–215.
  13. ^ Warr, L.N. "IMA–CNMNC approved mineral symbols." Mineralogical Magazine, 2021, v. 85, p. 291–320. doi:10.1180/mgm.2021.43.
  14. ^ Darrell J. Henry, Milan Novák, Frank C. Hawthorne, Andreas Ertl, Barbara L. Dutrow, Pavel Uher, and Federico Pezzotta (2011). "Nomenclature of the tourmaline-supergroup minerals" (PDF). American Mineralogist. 96 (5–6): 895–913. Bibcode:2011AmMin..96..895H. doi:10.2138/am.2011.3636. S2CID 38696645. (PDF) from the original on 2012-03-26.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Erratum: American Mineralogist (2013), Volume 98, page 524.
  16. ^ Frank C. Hawthorne and Dona M. Dirlam. "Tourmaline: Tourmaline the Indicator Mineral: From Atomic Arrangement to Viking Navigation." Elements, October 2011, v. 7, p. (5): 307–312, doi:10.2113/gselements.7.5.307.
  17. ^ Hamburger, Gabrielle E.; Buerger, M.J. (1948). "The structure of tourmaline". American Mineralogist. 33 (9–10): 532–540. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  18. ^ Nesse, William D. (2000). Introduction to mineralogy. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 303–304. ISBN 9780195106916.
  19. ^ "Simply Brilliant – An Exceptional Collection of Fine Jewelry with Outstanding Stones and Crystals | GeoRarities". 2022-01-19. Retrieved 2022-01-27.
  20. ^ "Tourmaline | mineral". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-06-03.
  21. ^ Reinitz & Rossman, 1988.
  22. ^ Kirk Feral Magnetism in Gemstones 2013-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Kurt Nassau (1984), Gemstone Enhancement: Heat, Irradiation, Impregnation, Dyeing, and Other Treatments, Butterworth Publishers
  24. ^ Hubert, John F. (1962-09-01). "A zircon-tourmaline-rutile maturity index and the interdependence of the composition of heavy mineral assemblages with the gross composition and texture of sandstones". Journal of Sedimentary Research. 32 (3). doi:10.1306/74D70CE5-2B21-11D7-8648000102C1865D. ISSN 1527-1404. from the original on 2018-01-04.
  25. ^ Dana, James Dwight; Klien, Cornelis; Hurlbut, Cornelius Searle (1977). Manual of Mineralogy (19th ed.). John Wiley and Sons. ISBN 9780471032885.
  26. ^ Rynerson, Fred (1977). Exploring and Mining Gems and Gold in the West. Naturegraph. ISBN 9780911010602.
  27. ^ Johnson, Paul Willard (Winter 1968–69). "Common Gems of San Diego". Gems and Gemology. XII: 358.
  28. ^ Rossman et al. 1991.
  29. ^ a b "Largest cut Paraiba Tourmaline". Guinness World Records. 2014. from the original on 26 September 2014. Retrieved 29 April 2018.
  30. ^ a b King, Mike (October 17, 2009). . Montreal Gazette. Canwest News Service. Archived from the original on 2013-04-02 – via canada.com.
  31. ^ ""Paraiba Tourmaline"-type Copper-bearing Tourmaline from Brazil, Nigeria, and Mozambique".
  32. ^ Augustyn, Allison; Grande, Lance (2009). Gems and Gemstones: Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World. University of Chicago Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0226305110. from the original on 2018-04-29 – via Google Books.
  33. ^ "Tourmaline: The gemstone Tourmaline information and pictures". minerals.net. from the original on 2017-10-16. Retrieved 2018-01-04.

General and cited sources edit

  • Ertl, A.; Pertlik, F.; Bernhardt, H.-J. (1997). "Investigations on Olenite with Excess Boron from the Koralpe, Styria, Austria" (PDF). Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Klasse. Anzeiger. Abt. I (134): 3–10.
  • Ertl, A. (2006). "About the Etymology and the Type Localities of Schorl" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Österreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft. 152: 7–16.
  • Ertl, A. (2007). "About the Type Locality and the Nomenclature of Dravite" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Österreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft. 153: 265–271.
  • Ertl, A. (2008). "About the Nomenclature and the Type Locality of Elbaite: A Historical Review" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Österreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft. 154: 35–44.
  • Reinitz, I. M.; Rossman, G. R. (1988). "Role of Natural Radiation in Tourmaline Coloration" (PDF). American Mineralogist. 73: 822–825.
  • Rossman, G. R.; Fritsch, E.; Shigley, J. E. (1991). "Origin of Color in Cuprian Elbaite from São José de Batalha, Paraíba, Brazil" (PDF). American Mineralogist. 76: 1479–1484.
  • Schumann, Walter (2006). Gemstones of the World (3rd ed.). New York: Sterling Publishing. pp. 126–127.

Further reading edit

  • Henry, Darrell J.; Novák, Milan; Hawthorne, Frank C.; Ertl, Andreas; Dutrow, Barbara L.; Uher, Pavel; Pezzotta, Federico (2011). "Nomenclature of the Tourmaline-Supergroup Minerals". American Mineralogist. 96 (5–6): 895–913. Bibcode:2011AmMin..96..895H. doi:10.2138/am.2011.3636. S2CID 38696645.

External links edit

  • Tourmaline classification 2010-07-17 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mindat tourmaline group
  • ICA's tourmaline page International Colored Gemstone Association on Tourmaline
  • Farlang historical tourmaline references 2010-04-18 at the Wayback Machine US localities, antique references
  • Webmineral elbaite page, crystallographic and mineral information on elbaite
  • Tourmaline History and Lore at GIA.edu

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For other uses see Tourmaline disambiguation Tourmaline ˈ t ʊer m e l ɪ n ˌ l iː n TOOR me lin leen is a crystalline silicate mineral group in which boron is compounded with elements such as aluminium iron magnesium sodium lithium or potassium This gemstone comes in a wide variety of colors TourmalineGeneralCategoryCyclosilicateFormula repeating unit Ca K Na Al Fe Li Mg Mn 3 Al Cr Fe V 6 BO3 3 Si Al B 6O18 OH F 4 1 2 IMA symbolTur 3 Crystal systemTrigonalCrystal classDitrigonal pyramidal 3m H M symbol 3m Space groupR3m no 160 IdentificationColorMost commonly black but can range from colorless to brown red orange yellow green blue violet pink or hues in between It can also be bi colored or even tri colored Rarely it can be found as neon green or electric blue Crystal habitParallel and elongated acicular prisms sometimes radiating massive scattered grains in granite CleavageIndistinctFractureUneven small conchoidalTenacityBrittleMohs scale hardness7 0 7 5LusterVitreous sometimes resinousStreakWhiteDiaphaneityTranslucent to opaqueSpecific gravity3 06 0 20 0 06 1 Density2 82 3 32Polish lusterVitreous 1 Optical propertiesDouble refractive uniaxial negative 1 Refractive indexnw 1 635 1 675ne 1 610 1 650Birefringence 0 018 to 0 040 typically about 0 020 but in dark stones it may reach 0 040 1 PleochroismTypically moderate to strong 1 Red definite dark red light red Green strong dark green yellow green Brown definite dark brown light brown Blue strong dark blue light blueDispersion0 017 1 Ultraviolet fluorescencePink stones inert to very weak red to violet in long and short wave 1 Absorption spectraStrong narrow band at 498 nm and almost complete absorption of red down to 640 nm in blue and green stones red and pink stones show lines at 458 and 451 nm as well as a broad band in the green spectrum 1 Main tourmaline producing countriesThe name is derived from the Sinhalese tōramalli ට රමල ල which refers to the carnelian gemstones 4 Contents 1 History 2 Species and varieties 2 1 Schorl 2 2 Dravite 2 3 Elbaite 3 Chemical composition 4 Physical properties 4 1 Crystal structure 4 2 Color 4 3 Magnetism 4 4 Treatments 5 Geology 6 Localities 6 1 United States 6 2 Brazil 6 3 Africa 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 General and cited sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editBrightly colored Ceylonese gem tourmalines were brought to Europe in great quantities by the Dutch East India Company to satisfy a demand for curiosities and gems Tourmaline was sometimes called the Ceylonese Magnet because it could attract and then repel hot ashes due to its pyroelectric properties 5 Tourmalines were used by chemists in the 19th century to polarize light by shining rays onto a cut and polished surface of the gem 6 Species and varieties editCommonly encountered species and varieties of tourmaline include the following Schorl species Brownish black to black schorl Dravite species from the Drave district of Carinthia Dark yellow to brownish black dravite Elbaite species named after the island of Elba Italy Red or pinkish red rubellite variety Light blue to bluish green indicolite variety from indigo Green verdelite or emerald variety Colorless achroite variety from Ancient Greek axrwmos akhrōmos colorless Schorl edit nbsp A single stark green fluorite isolated on top of schorl crystals nbsp Schorl magnified 10 The most common species of tourmaline is schorl the sodium iron divalent endmember of the group It may account for 95 or more of all tourmaline in nature The early history of the mineral schorl shows that the name schorl was in use prior to 1400 because a village known today as Zschorlau in Saxony Germany was then named Schorl or minor variants of this name and the village had a nearby tin mine where in addition to cassiterite black tourmaline was found The first description of schorl with the name schurl and its occurrence various tin mines in the Ore Mountains was written by Johannes Mathesius 1504 1565 in 1562 under the title Sarepta oder Bergpostill 7 Up to about 1600 additional names used in the German language were Schurel Schorle and Schurl Beginning in the 18th century the name Schorl was mainly used in the German speaking area In English the names shorl and shirl were used in the 18th century In the 19th century the names common schorl schorl schorl and iron tourmaline were the English words used for this mineral 7 Dravite edit nbsp Black dravite on a grey matrixDravite also called brown tourmaline is the sodium magnesium rich tourmaline endmember Uvite in comparison is a calcium magnesium tourmaline Dravite forms multiple series with other tourmaline members including schorl and elbaite 8 The name dravite was used for the first time by Gustav Tschermak 1836 1927 Professor of Mineralogy and Petrography at the University of Vienna in his book Lehrbuch der Mineralogie published in 1884 for magnesium rich and sodium rich tourmaline from village Dobrova near Unterdrauburg in the Drava river area Carinthia Austro Hungarian Empire Today this tourmaline locality type locality for dravite at Dobrova near Dravograd is a part of the Republic of Slovenia 9 Tschermak gave this tourmaline the name dravite for the Drava river area which is the district along the Drava River in German Drau in Latin Drave in Austria and Slovenia The chemical composition which was given by Tschermak in 1884 for this dravite approximately corresponds to the formula NaMg3 Al Mg 6B3Si6O27 OH which is in good agreement except for the OH content with the endmember formula of dravite as known today 9 Dravite varieties include the deep green chromium dravite and the vanadium dravite 10 Elbaite edit Main article Elbaite nbsp Elbaite with quartz and lepidolite on cleavelanditeA lithium tourmaline elbaite was one of three pegmatitic minerals from Uto Sweden in which the new alkali element lithium Li was determined in 1818 by Johan August Arfwedson for the first time 11 Elba Island Italy was one of the first localities where colored and colorless Li tourmalines were extensively chemically analysed In 1850 Karl Friedrich August Rammelsberg described fluorine F in tourmaline for the first time In 1870 he proved that all varieties of tourmaline contain chemically bound water In 1889 Scharitzer proposed the substitution of OH by F in red Li tourmaline from Susice Czech Republic In 1914 Vladimir Vernadsky proposed the name Elbait for lithium sodium and aluminum rich tourmaline from Elba Island Italy with the simplified formula Li Na HAl6B2Si4O21 11 Most likely the type material for elbaite was found at Fonte del Prete San Piero in Campo Campo nell Elba Elba Island Province of Livorno Tuscany Italy 11 In 1933 Winchell published an updated formula for elbaite H8Na2Li3Al3B6Al12Si12O62 which is commonly used to date written as Na Li1 5Al1 5 Al6 BO3 3 Si6O18 OH 3 OH 11 The first crystal structure determination of a Li rich tourmaline was published in 1972 by Donnay and Barton performed on a pink elbaite from San Diego County California United States citation needed Chemical composition edit nbsp ElbaiteThe tourmaline mineral group is chemically one of the most complicated groups of silicate minerals Its composition varies widely because of isomorphous replacement solid solution and its general formula can be written as XY3Z6 T6O18 BO3 3V3W where 12 X Ca Na K vacancy Y Li Mg Fe2 Mn2 Zn Al Cr3 V3 Fe3 Ti4 vacancy Z Mg Al Fe3 Cr3 V3 T Si Al B B B vacancy V OH O W OH F OThe 39 minerals in the group endmember formulas recognized by the International Mineralogical Association Species Name Ideal Endmember Formula IMA Number SymbolAdachiite CaFe2 3Al6 Si5AlO18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 2012 101 AdcAlumino oxy rossmanite Al3Al6 Si5AlO18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2020 008 AorsmBosiite NaFe3 3 Al4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2014 094 BosCelleriite Mn2 2Al Al6 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3 OH 2019 089 CllChromium dravite NaMg3Cr6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1982 055 CdrvChromo alumino povondraite NaCr3 Al4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2013 089 CapovDarrellhenryite NaLiAl2Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2012 026 DhryDravite NaMg3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1884 a DrvDutrowite Na Fe2 5Ti0 5 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2019 082 DtwElbaite Na Li1 5 Al1 5 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1913 a ElbFerro bosiite NaFe3 3 Al4Fe2 2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2022 069 FbosFeruvite CaFe2 3 MgAl5 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1987 057 FerFluor buergerite NaFe3 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3O3F 1965 005 FbuFluor dravite NaMg3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 2009 089 FdrvFluor elbaite Na Li1 5 Al1 5 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 2011 071 FelbFluor liddicoatite Ca Li2Al Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 1976 041 FldFluor schorl NaFe2 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 2010 067 FsrlFluor tsilaisite NaMn2 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 2012 044 FtlFluor uvite CaMg3 Al5Mg Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3F 1930 a FluvtFoitite Fe2 2Al Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1992 034 FoiLucchesiite Ca Fe2 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2015 043 LccMagnesio dutrowite Na Mg2 5Ti0 5 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2023 015 MdtwMagnesio foitite Mg2Al Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1998 037 MfoiMagnesio lucchesite Ca Mg3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2019 025 MlccMaruyamaite K MgAl2 Al5Mg Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2013 123 MryOlenite NaAl3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3O3OH 1985 006 OleOxy chromium dravite NaCr3 Mg2Cr4 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2011 097 OcdrvOxy dravite Na Al2Mg Al5Mg Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2012 004 OdrvOxy foitite Fe2 Al2 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2016 069 OfoiOxy schorl Na Fe2 2Al Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2011 011 OsrlOxy vanadium dravite NaV3 V4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 1999 050 OvdrvPovondraite NaFe3 3 Fe3 4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 1979 b PovPrincivalleite Na Mn2Al Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2020 056 PvaRossmanite LiAl2 Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1996 018 RsmSchorl NaFe2 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 1505 a SrlTsilaisite NaMn2 3Al6Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 2011 047 TslUvite CaMg3 Al5Mg Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3OH 2000 030 UvtVanadio oxy chromium dravite NaV3 Cr4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2012 034 VocdrvVanadio oxy dravite NaV3 Al4Mg2 Si6O18 BO3 3 OH 3O 2012 074 Vodrv a b c d Name in existence before the IMA commission existed Named ferridravite in 1979 renamed to povondraite by the IMA in the 1990s The IMA commission on new mineral names published a list of approved symbols for each mineral species in 2021 13 A revised nomenclature for the tourmaline group was published in 2011 14 15 16 Physical properties editCrystal structure edit nbsp Tri chromatic elbaite crystals on quartz Himalaya Mine San Diego Co California USTourmaline is a six member ring cyclosilicate having a trigonal crystal system It occurs as long slender to thick prismatic and columnar crystals that are usually triangular in cross section often with curved striated faces The style of termination at the ends of crystals is sometimes asymmetrical called hemimorphism Small slender prismatic crystals are common in a fine grained granite called aplite often forming radial daisy like patterns Tourmaline is distinguished by its three sided prisms no other common mineral has three sides Prisms faces often have heavy vertical striations that produce a rounded triangular effect Tourmaline is rarely perfectly euhedral An exception was the fine dravite tourmalines of Yinnietharra in western Australia The deposit was discovered in the 1970s but is now exhausted All hemimorphic crystals are piezoelectric and are often pyroelectric as well citation needed A crystal of tourmaline is built up of units consisting of a six member silica ring that binds above to a large cation such as sodium The ring binds below to a layer of metal ions and hydroxyls or halogens which structurally resembles a fragment of kaolin This in turn binds to three triangular borate ions Units joined end to end form columns running the length of the crystal Each column binds with two other columns offset one third and two thirds of the vertical length of a single unit to form bundles of three columns Bundles are packed together to form the final crystal structure Because the neighboring columns are offset the basic structural unit is not a unit cell The actual unit cell of this structure includes portions of several units belonging to adjacent columns 17 18 nbsp Oblique view of a single unit of the tourmaline crystal structure nbsp View of single unit of tourmaline structure along the axis of the crystal nbsp View along a axis of three columns of tourmaline units forming a bundle nbsp Structure of a tourmaline crystal viewed looking along the c axis of the crystalColor edit nbsp Two dark green rectangular tourmaline stones and one oval tourmaline stone nbsp Bi chromatic tourmaline crystal 0 8 inches 2 cm long nbsp Tourmaline mineral approximately 10 cm 3 9 in tallTourmaline has a variety of colors Iron rich tourmalines are usually black to bluish black to deep brown while magnesium rich varieties are brown to yellow and lithium rich tourmalines are almost any color blue green red yellow pink etc Rarely it is colorless Bi colored and multicolored crystals are common reflecting variations of fluid chemistry during crystallization Crystals may be green at one end and pink at the other or green on the outside and pink inside this type is called watermelon tourmaline and is prized in jewelry An excellent example of watermelon tourmaline jewelry is a brooch piece 1969 gold watermelon tourmaline diamonds by Andrew Grima British b Italy 1921 2007 in the collection of Kimberly Klosterman and on display at the Cincinnati Art Museum 19 Some forms of tourmaline are dichroic they change color when viewed from different directions 20 The pink color of tourmalines from many localities is the result of prolonged natural irradiation During their growth these tourmaline crystals incorporated Mn2 and were initially very pale Due to natural gamma ray exposure from radioactive decay of 40K in their granitic environment gradual formation of Mn3 ions occurs which is responsible for the deepening of the pink to red color 21 Magnetism edit Opaque black schorl and yellow tsilaisite are idiochromatic tourmaline species that have high magnetic susceptibilities due to high concentrations of iron and manganese respectively Most gem quality tourmalines are of the elbaite species Elbaite tourmalines are allochromatic deriving most of their color and magnetic susceptibility from schorl which imparts iron and tsilaisite which imparts manganese citation needed Red and pink tourmalines have the lowest magnetic susceptibilities among the elbaites while tourmalines with bright yellow green and blue colors are the most magnetic elbaites Dravite species such as green chromium dravite and brown dravite are diamagnetic A handheld neodymium magnet can be used to identify or separate some types of tourmaline gems from others For example blue indicolite tourmaline is the only blue gemstone of any kind that will show a drag response when a neodymium magnet is applied Any blue tourmaline that is diamagnetic can be identified as paraiba tourmaline colored by copper in contrast to magnetic blue tourmaline colored by iron 22 Treatments edit Some tourmaline gems especially pink to red colored stones are altered by heat treatment to improve their color Overly dark red stones can be lightened by careful heat treatment The pink color in manganese containing near colorless to pale pink stones can be greatly increased by irradiation with gamma rays or electron beams Irradiation is almost impossible to detect in tourmalines and does not currently affect the value Heavily included tourmalines such as rubellite and Brazilian paraiba are sometimes clarity enhanced A clarity enhanced tourmaline especially the paraiba variety is worth much less than an untreated gem of equal clarity 23 Geology edit source source source source source source source Video of tourmaline oreTourmaline is found in granite and granite pegmatites and in metamorphic rocks such as schist and marble Schorl and lithium rich tourmalines are usually found in granite and granite pegmatite Magnesium rich tourmalines dravites are generally restricted to schists and marble Tourmaline is a durable mineral and can be found in minor amounts as grains in sandstone and conglomerate and is part of the ZTR index for highly weathered sediments 24 Localities editGem and specimen tourmaline is mined chiefly in Brazil and many parts of Africa including Tanzania Nigeria Kenya Madagascar Mozambique Malawi and Namibia It is also mined in Asia notably in Pakistan Afghanistan and Indonesia as well as in Sri Lanka and India 25 where some placer material suitable for gem use is found United States edit Some fine gems and specimen material have been produced in the United States with the first discoveries in 1822 in the state of Maine California became a large producer of tourmaline in the early 1900s The Maine deposits tend to produce crystals in raspberry pink red as well as minty greens The California deposits are known for bright pinks as well as bicolors During the early 1900s Maine and California were the world s largest producers of gem tourmalines The Empress Dowager Cixi of China loved pink tourmaline and bought large quantities for gemstones and carvings from the then new Himalaya Mine located in San Diego County California 26 It is not clear when the first tourmaline was found in California Native Americans have used pink and green tourmaline as funeral gifts for centuries The first documented case was in 1890 when Charles Russel Orcutt found pink tourmaline at what later became the Stewart Mine at Pala California in San Diego County 27 Brazil edit nbsp Watermelon Tourmaline mineral on quartz matrix crystal approximately 2 cm 0 79 in wide at face Almost every color of tourmaline can be found in Brazil especially in the Brazilian states of Minas Gerais and Bahia The new type of tourmaline which soon became known as paraiba tourmaline came in blue and green Brazilian paraiba tourmaline usually contains abundant inclusions Much of the paraiba tourmaline from Brazil does not actually comes from Paraiba but the neighboring state of Rio Grande do Norte Material from Rio Grande do Norte is often somewhat less intense in color but many fine gems are found there It was determined that the element copper was important in the coloration of the stone 28 A large bluish green tourmaline from Paraiba measuring 36 44 mm 33 75 mm 21 85 mm 1 43 in 1 33 in 0 86 in and weighing 191 87 carats 1 3536 oz 38 374 g is the world s largest cut tourmaline 29 30 Owned by Billionaire Business Enterprises 29 it was presented in Montreal Quebec Canada on 14 October 2009 30 Africa edit nbsp Paraiba tourmaline from MozambiqueIn the late 1990s copper containing tourmaline was found in Nigeria The material was generally paler and less saturated than the Brazilian materials although the material generally was much less included A more recent African discovery from Mozambique has also produced tourmaline colored by copper similar to the Brazilian paraiba The Mozambique paraiba material usually is more intensely colored than the Nigerian and Mozambique Paraiba tourmaline have similar colors to the Brazilian Paraiba but the prices are relatively cheaper better clarity and larger sizes In recent years the pricing of these beautiful gemstones have increased significantly 31 Another highly valuable variety is chrome tourmaline a rare type of dravite tourmaline from Tanzania Chrome tourmaline is a rich green color due to the presence of chromium atoms in the crystal Of the standard elbaite colors blue indicolite gems are typically the most valuable 32 followed by green verdelite and pink to red rubellite 33 See also editBenjamin Wilson experimented with the electrical properties of tourmalineReferences editCitations edit a b c d e f g h i GIA Gem Reference Guide Gemological Institute of America 1995 ISBN 0 87311 019 6 Tourmaline Mindat org Archived from the original on 2005 12 28 Retrieved 2005 09 12 This website details specifically and clearly how the complicated chemical formula is structured a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint postscript link Warr L N 2021 IMA CNMNC approved mineral symbols Mineralogical Magazine 85 3 291 320 Bibcode 2021MinM 85 291W doi 10 1180 mgm 2021 43 S2CID 235729616 tourmaline Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on October 16 2021 Retrieved 2021 03 19 Erhart Jiri Kittinger Erwin Privratska Jana 2010 Fundamentals of Piezoelectric Sensorics Mechanical Dielectric and Thermodynamical Properties of Piezoelectric Materials Springer p 4 ISBN 9783540684275 Draper John William 1861 A Textbook on chemistry New York Harper and Brothers p 93 a b Ertl 2006 What is Tourmaline GIA a b Ertl 2007 Tourmaline Information Gemstone Education a b c d Ertl 2008 Hawthorne F C amp Henry D J 1999 Classification of the minerals of the tourmaline group Archived 2007 10 16 at the Wayback Machine European Journal of Mineralogy 11 pp 201 215 Warr L N IMA CNMNC approved mineral symbols Mineralogical Magazine 2021 v 85 p 291 320 doi 10 1180 mgm 2021 43 Darrell J Henry Milan Novak Frank C Hawthorne Andreas Ertl Barbara L Dutrow Pavel Uher and Federico Pezzotta 2011 Nomenclature of the tourmaline supergroup minerals PDF American Mineralogist 96 5 6 895 913 Bibcode 2011AmMin 96 895H doi 10 2138 am 2011 3636 S2CID 38696645 Archived PDF from the original on 2012 03 26 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Erratum American Mineralogist 2013 Volume 98 page 524 Frank C Hawthorne and Dona M Dirlam Tourmaline Tourmaline the Indicator Mineral From Atomic Arrangement to Viking Navigation Elements October 2011 v 7 p 5 307 312 doi 10 2113 gselements 7 5 307 Hamburger Gabrielle E Buerger M J 1948 The structure of tourmaline American Mineralogist 33 9 10 532 540 Retrieved 15 February 2021 Nesse William D 2000 Introduction to mineralogy New York Oxford University Press pp 303 304 ISBN 9780195106916 Simply Brilliant An Exceptional Collection of Fine Jewelry with Outstanding Stones and Crystals GeoRarities 2022 01 19 Retrieved 2022 01 27 Tourmaline mineral Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 06 03 Reinitz amp Rossman 1988 Kirk Feral Magnetism in Gemstones Archived 2013 12 03 at the Wayback Machine Kurt Nassau 1984 Gemstone Enhancement Heat Irradiation Impregnation Dyeing and Other Treatments Butterworth Publishers Hubert John F 1962 09 01 A zircon tourmaline rutile maturity index and the interdependence of the composition of heavy mineral assemblages with the gross composition and texture of sandstones Journal of Sedimentary Research 32 3 doi 10 1306 74D70CE5 2B21 11D7 8648000102C1865D ISSN 1527 1404 Archived from the original on 2018 01 04 Dana James Dwight Klien Cornelis Hurlbut Cornelius Searle 1977 Manual of Mineralogy 19th ed John Wiley and Sons ISBN 9780471032885 Rynerson Fred 1977 Exploring and Mining Gems and Gold in the West Naturegraph ISBN 9780911010602 Johnson Paul Willard Winter 1968 69 Common Gems of San Diego Gems and Gemology XII 358 Rossman et al 1991 a b Largest cut Paraiba Tourmaline Guinness World Records 2014 Archived from the original on 26 September 2014 Retrieved 29 April 2018 a b King Mike October 17 2009 Giant jewel breaks record Montreal Gazette Canwest News Service Archived from the original on 2013 04 02 via canada com Paraiba Tourmaline type Copper bearing Tourmaline from Brazil Nigeria and Mozambique Augustyn Allison Grande Lance 2009 Gems and Gemstones Timeless Natural Beauty of the Mineral World University of Chicago Press p 152 ISBN 978 0226305110 Archived from the original on 2018 04 29 via Google Books Tourmaline The gemstone Tourmaline information and pictures minerals net Archived from the original on 2017 10 16 Retrieved 2018 01 04 General and cited sources edit Ertl A Pertlik F Bernhardt H J 1997 Investigations on Olenite with Excess Boron from the Koralpe Styria Austria PDF Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Klasse Anzeiger Abt I 134 3 10 Ertl A 2006 About the Etymology and the Type Localities of Schorl PDF Mitteilungen der Osterreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft 152 7 16 Ertl A 2007 About the Type Locality and the Nomenclature of Dravite PDF Mitteilungen der Osterreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft 153 265 271 Ertl A 2008 About the Nomenclature and the Type Locality of Elbaite A Historical Review PDF Mitteilungen der Osterreichischen Mineralogischen Gesellschaft 154 35 44 Reinitz I M Rossman G R 1988 Role of Natural Radiation in Tourmaline Coloration PDF American Mineralogist 73 822 825 Rossman G R Fritsch E Shigley J E 1991 Origin of Color in Cuprian Elbaite from Sao Jose de Batalha Paraiba Brazil PDF American Mineralogist 76 1479 1484 Schumann Walter 2006 Gemstones of the World 3rd ed New York Sterling Publishing pp 126 127 Further reading editHenry Darrell J Novak Milan Hawthorne Frank C Ertl Andreas Dutrow Barbara L Uher Pavel Pezzotta Federico 2011 Nomenclature of the Tourmaline Supergroup Minerals American Mineralogist 96 5 6 895 913 Bibcode 2011AmMin 96 895H doi 10 2138 am 2011 3636 S2CID 38696645 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tourmaline nbsp Look up tourmaline in Wiktionary the free dictionary Tourmaline classification Archived 2010 07 17 at the Wayback Machine Mindat tourmaline group ICA s tourmaline page International Colored Gemstone Association on Tourmaline Farlang historical tourmaline references Archived 2010 04 18 at the Wayback Machine US localities antique references Webmineral elbaite page crystallographic and mineral information on elbaite Tourmaline History and Lore at GIA edu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tourmaline amp oldid 1199977012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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