SOLD
MD-144979
Thomsonite
Aurangabad District, Maharashtra, India
Small Cabinet, 6.3 x 2.8 x 2.6 cm
SOLD
You should have seen dealers rush to snap these up when the buzz got around at the show where they appeared that they had indeed been identified as superb specimens of rare thomsonite! This is a very fine cluster of three, intergrown spheres. The broken sphere highlights the radiating, acicular crystal growth. A neat revelation! From the archives of the Mineralogical Record (Oct. 2005): "In early September a well-digging in India produced a significant mineral find-as well-diggings in India often have done-and a handful of striking-looking miniature to large-cabinet specimens for Rob Lavinsky to add to his site. Three Indian dealers also bought up some of these intriguing specimens of thomsonite, a zeolite species heretofore almost unknown from the basalts of the Deccan Plateau (in the Indian Zeolites Special Issue, Berthold Ottens writes that thomsonite "is one of the rarest zeolites of the region not to be found among dealers' offerings"). This newly found thomsonite occurs as perfect spheres, to 7 cm in diameter, composed of radiating acicular crystals, resting directly on brownish gray basalt matrix. The spheres are opaque and creamy white to very pale orange, with the surface texture of fine-grained sandpaper. Specimens consist of isolated spheres or intergrown, wavy-surfaced groups of spheres resting lightly on matrix, or grapelike clusters free of matrix. This material was originally called pectolite, mesolite, scolecite, or a mixture of these (since indeed you would think of any of them before you would think of thomsonite), but testing has settled the question: it is in fact thomsonite. The well-digging site from which the specimens came-and more perhaps will come-is said to lie in a forest near Aurangabad, Maharashtra."