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What is Charoite
Untitled DocumentCharoite is a rare mineral, first described in 1978 and named after the Chara River. It has been reported that it only comes from one location in the world and that is the Sakha Republic, Yakutia, Siberia, Russia. It is translucent lavender to purple in color with a pearly luster. However, it is a separate and distinc mineral rather than a rock. The stone is strictly massive (no discernible form or structure) in nature, and fractures are conchoidal. It has an unusual swirling, fibrous appearance, sometimes chatoyant, and that, along with its intense color. Though reportedly discovered in the 1940s, it was not known to the outside world until its description in 1978. It is said to be opaque and unattractive when found in the field, a fact that may have contributed to its late recognition. Charoite is used as an ornamental stone and is set in Jewellery). Charoite occurs in association with tinaksite and canasite. OTHER NAMES: - "Royal lavender" - name used in transliterations of some Russian language allusions to this gemrock.
- Charit - name used in a Russian Collection catalog. My contact with the company indicates that noone there knows about the correct name -- i.e., they do not consider this designation to be an error in
- Transliteration or a typo. The omission of "o" seems not easy to explain; the omission of the final "e" may reflect use of the German name.
- Charolite - name used in descriptive advertisements (etc.) by some American marketers of pieces of rough and/or jewelry and/or carvings or other items fashioned from this rock.
- Lilac stone - name applied, particularly in the past, in the marketplace, and still used in a few places, catalogs and web sites.
- Tokkoite - Another name
USES: Jewellry (e.g., pendants, brooches, pins and rings); tumbled stones; spheres, pyramids and hearts; carvings; candlesticks and lamp bases; desk sets and clock mountings; jewelry boxes and diverse vessels, such as vases; tiles; polished pieces strictly for use as show pieces, etc. Also: "It was used for the first time in the construction of the Aeroflot building in Paris". You will be able to fine this Beautiful stone set in rings, earrings and pendants here. Here is a video of a Lady who has a nice slab of this wonderful stone. Here is a vidoe of the stone in a pendant OCCURRENCE: Contact metasomatic deposits in calcareous rocks that have been intruded by alkalic magmas: NOTEWORTHY LOCALITY: In the interfluve area between the Chara and Olekma rivers, south of Olekminsk in the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), which is in east central Siberia, northeast of Lake Baikal. The locality is about 520 km (325 miles) northeast of the northern tip of Lake Baikal. According to some reports, the deposit is now "exhausted.". According to the instructions (above) here is map of the area - What I found interesting was that it you click to view the salellite picture then you can see that there is a purple colour to the landscape! Take a look.... View Larger Map REMARKS: This name of this gemrock is recorded variously as based on its occurrence near the the Chara River OR on the basis of the impression it leads to -- i.e., it is noted that "chary" in Russian means "charms" or "magic" (see -- However, to date, I have found no such Russian word meaning either charms or magic; the nearest possibility would transliterate to a ocharov...). In any case, according to the CNMMN of the IMA, the type locality is the "Charo River, Marun alkaline complex, Yakutia (SW), Siberia, Russia." By the way, some maps show Yakutia as Jakutsk, Yakutsk or Jakutiya as well as calling it the Republic of Sakha.
Lapidaries indicate that charoite is rather difficult to work because it tends to break while cutting and polishing it. Some have impregnated it with plastics to reduce this problem but the end products (which I have not seen or at least not recognized) are considered to be less appealing to potential purchasers.
The fact that this gemrock is said to be opaque and unattractive when found in the field may explain why it is a relatively late-comer to the marketplace. -- It was apparently not discovered until the late 1940s and did not become widely known elsewhere until the late 1970s. In addition, however, its occurrence in this remote region also may have been a factor. -- This part of Russia (Siberia) is known for its forbidding climate and terrain: Indeed, it said that "the terrain is so hostile and weather so severe, miners are taken to the site by helicopter and are able to stay only two months". Yet, Yakutia produces nearly all of Russia's diamonds, much of its gold and silver and is also a major producer of coal and natural gas, so minerals and rocks were certainly sought within this so-called republic.
Charoite-rich rocks contain several rather rare minerals -- e.g., pale yellow-pink or orange tinaksite, yellow-brown to dark brown batisite (recorded in some descriptions as bathycite); yellowish green or brown ekanite; colorless to off-white dellaite; bottle green diopside (recorded in some reports by the discredited name fedorovite); and pink, lavender or reddish brown miserite -- as well as the charoite and more common minerals potassium feldspar, quartz and aegirine. So far as anecdotes: When I found that the Chara River is a tributary of the Lena, I recalled that I once heard that Lenin's real name was Vladimer Ilyich Ulyanov and apparently he based his chosen "Lenin" pseudonym on the Lena River because it flows northward -- i.e., in the opposite direction -- from the Volga River upon which his opponent Georgi Plekhanov apparently based his pseudonym Volgin. (To date, I have not found documentation to support this recollection. - Charoite (K(Ca;Na)2Si4O10(OH;F)H2O)
- Color : Violet, lilac, light brown
- Mohs scale hardness : 5 - 6
- Specific gravity : 2.54 - 2.58
References: - ***Barite and gibbsite powder plus an organic (polymer) cement. - [Appearance suffices (See Keeling, 1992).].
- ***?"Imitation charoite," the properties of which are recorded by Bennett (1992), - [Apparently its artificial appearance is such that it is readily distinguished from natural charoite.].
Massive beryl and quartz (heat treated and dyed). - [Dye concentrations can be seen in fractures (Koivula, Kammerling and Fritsch, 1992, p.135).]. - ***Royal Russianite. largely, if not wholly, a dyed aggregate of plastic(s?). - [Appearance suffices (Johnson et al., 1999, p.221).].
For information about the Spiritual Properties of this stone Click Here
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