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SPODUMENE

:''"Kunzite" redirects here. For the Sailor Moon character, see Shitennou.''
'Spodumene' is a pyroxene mineral consisting of lithium aluminium inosilicate - LiAl(SiO3)2 - and is a source of lithium. It occurs as colourless to yellowish, purplish or lilac kunzite (see below), yellowish-green or emerald-green hiddenite, prismatic crystals, often of great size. Single crystals of 14.3m in size are reported from the Black Hills of South Dakota.[1]
Crystals form in the monoclinic system and are typically heavily striated parallel to the principal axis. Crystal faces are often etched and pitted with triangular markings.
''Spodumene'' is derived from the Greek ''spodumenos'' (σποδυμενος), meaning "burnt to ashes," owing to the opaque, ash-grey appearance of material refined for use in industry.
Spodumene occurs in lithium rich granites and pegmatites. Transparent material has long been used as a gemstone with varieties kunzite and hiddenite noted for their strong pleochroism. Source localities include Brazil, Madagascar, USA (North Carolina, California), Afghanistan, and Pakistan.

Contents
Economic Importance
Kunzite
References
See also

Economic Importance


Spodumene is an important source of lithium for use in industrial ceramics, mobile phone and automotive batteries, medicine and as a fluxing agent. Lithium is extracted from spodumene by fusing in acid. Spodumene is also an important flux in glazes used by ceramic artists, especially Shino glazes.
World production of lithium via spodumene is around 80,000 metric tonnes per annum, primarily from the Greenbushes pegmatite of Western Australia, and some Chinese and Chilean sources. Spodumene is becoming less important a source of lithium due to the emergence of alkaline brine lake sources in China and Argentina, which produce lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide directly.

Kunzite


Kunzite
See the pleochroism and the tipical etched marks

'Kunzite' is a pink to lilac colored gemstone, a variety of spodumene with the colour coming from minor to trace amounts of manganese. Some (but not all) kunzite used for gemstones has been heated to enhance its colour. It was named in honor of New York mineralogist and gemologist George Frederick Kunz. It has been found in Brazil, USA, Canada, CIS, Mexico, Sweden, Western Australia, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

References



★ Anthony, John W., Bideaux, Richard A., Bladh, Kenneth W., and Nichols, Monte C. (1990): Handbook of Mineralogy: Mineral Data Publishing, Tucson, Arizona

★ Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., ISBN 0-471-80580-7

★ Kunz, George Frederick (1892) Gems and Precious Stones of North America. The Scientific Publishing Company, New York NY

★ Palache, C., Davidson, S. C., and Goranson, E.A. (1930) The Hiddenite deposit in Alexander County, N.Carolina. American Mineralogist Vol 15 No. 8 p. 280

★ Webster, R. (2000). ''Gems: Their sources, descriptions and identification'' (5th ed.), pp. 186-190. Great Britain: Butterworth-Heinemann.

Webmineral

Mindat.org
1. Robert Louis Bonewitz, 2005, ''Rock and Gem'', London, Dorling Kindersley

See also



List of minerals

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