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Bible Encyclopedias
Staurolite

1911 Encyclopedia Britannica

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a mineral consisting of basic aluminium and ferrous iron silicate with the formula HFeA1 5 Si 2 O 13. The material is, however, usually very impure, the crystals enclosing sometimes as much as 30 or 40% of quartz and other minerals as well as carbonaceous matter. Crystals are orthorhombic and have the form of six-sided prisms. Interpenetrating cruciform twinned crystals are very common and characteristic; they were early known as pierres de Croix or lapis crucifer, and the name staurolite, given by J. C. Delametherie in 1792, has the same meaning (Greek, QTavpos, a cross, and XiOos, a stone). In fig. 1 the twin-plane is (032) and the two prisms intercross FIG. I. FIG. 2. Twinned Crystals of Staurolite.

at an angle of 91° 22'; in fig. 2 the twin-plane is (232) and the. prisms intercross at nearly 60°. The mineral is translucent to opaque and dark reddish-brown in colour; it thus has a certain resemblance to garnet, and on this account has been called grenatite. Waterworn pebbles of material sufficiently transparent for cutting as gem-stones are occasionally found in the diamantiferous sands of Brazil. The hardness is 71 and the specific gravity 3.75. Staurolite is a characteristic mineral of crystalline schists, and it is also a product of contact-metamorphism. Large twinned crystals with rough surfaces are found in mica-schist in Brittany and at several places in the United States, e.g. in Fannin county, Georgia. Untwinned crystals, translucent and of a rich brown colour (grenatite), are abundant in the silvery white paragonite-schist of Monte Campione, St Gothard. (L. J. S.)

Bibliography Information
Chisholm, Hugh, General Editor. Entry for 'Staurolite'. 1911 Encyclopedia Britanica. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​bri/​s/staurolite.html. 1910.
 
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