The Crystal Circle
Specimen: Standard Gallery: Standard
Serandite with Aegirine
Serandite with Aegirine
Mont St. Hilaire, Quebec, Canada
Acanthite
Acanthite
Imiter, Atlas Mountains, Morocco
Corundum Var. Sapphire
Corundum Var. Sapphire
Balangoda, near Ratnapura, Sabaragamuwa Province, Sri Lanka
Adamite on Limonite
Adamite on Limonite
Ojuela Mine, Mapimi, Durango, Mexico
Zoisite Var. Tanzanite
Zoisite Var. Tanzanite
Merelani Mine, Lelatema Mountains, Arusha Region, Tanzania
Dioptase
Dioptase
Altyn-Tyube, Karagandy Oblast, Kazakhstan
Quartz Var. Optical sphere

Quartz Var. Optical sphere

sold
Locality
Minas Gerais, Brazil
Minerals
Quartz
Dimensions
4.25 x 4.25 x 4.25 cm
Size class
Miniature
SID
QUARTZ48

This sphere began as a very clear quartz crystal in Brazil, mined in the 1930's or 40's or earlier. The Canadian government bought the rough and stockpiled it for the WW2 war effort. The optical Quartz was used as lens in things like gun sites. In the 1980's Frank Melanson of Hawthorneden bought the whole lot of it and sent the rough to Idar Oberstein, Germany to be cut into precise spheres and eggs. I remember coming across a stash of these at Frank's house when we went about purchasing his entire inventory. At first we thought 'great, more quartz spheres,' but when I held it up and looked at my dad he was pictured perfectly upside down! 

This is an optical Quartz sphere, meaning there are NO inclusions so the distortion to light entering the sphere is scene with total precision and clarity. In the second picture, make note of the fact the the bill is upside down (while Franklin is right side up). In the third pic, the bill is rightside up, so Franklin is upside down, but in the reflection, the bill is upside down and the face is rightside up. This is fun to have to show to kids and other adults who are easily amused. 

The Hawthorneden stock had about 20,000 stone spheres and eggs in it. Over the years we have been hoarding these optical spheres while liquidating all the others. This one was, by the way priced at $120 back in the late eighties when they first got them back from the German factories. It weighs 108 grams, and is over 1 1/2 inches in diameter.

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