Yellow Scapolite |
The name Scapolite comes from the Greek "skapos", meaning "shaft" due to its long, prismatic crystals.
Scapolite Crystal |
Heat Treated Lavender Scapolite |
Scapolite is a soft stone, similar to Opal. It has a Mohs hardness of about 5.5 to 6. It's most suitable to pendants and earrings.
Very small pockets of Scapolite can be found in the US and around the world. Gemstone sources are found in Minas Gerias, Brazil; Madagascar, Tanzania, Canada, Switzerland and Burma. It can also be found in Mt. Vesuvius, Italy and in Norway and Mexico.
Luster is vitreous on freshly exposed crystals or surfaces but weathering causes a dulling of the luster, due to the softness of the stone. Scapolite will often fluoresce either orange, yellow or more rarely red under ultraviolet light---quartz and beryl minerals will not. Associated minerals include the garnet minerals almandine and andradite, actinolite, microcline, pyroxenes, apatite, andalusite, zircon, sphene, diopside and muscovite.
Cat's Eye Scapolite |
Wernerite, 'Pink Moonstone', Lavender Cat's Eye Scapolite, Violet Cat's Eye Scapolite, Pink Cat's Eye Scapolite, Mizzonite, Dipyre, Marialite and Meionite are lesser known gemstone trade names and mineral associations.
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