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Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams

Vanadium Diopside with Minor Graphite - Display Specimen - Terminated Crystal - 2.07 grams

Regular price
$72.00
Sale price
$72.00
Regular price
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Unit price
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Gem:  Vanadium diopside with minor graphite

Weight:  2.07 grams

Dimensions:  20.4 x 11 x 7.8 mm

Clarity:  N/A - Excellent clarity for a specimen of this gem type

Origin:  Merelani Hills, Tanzania

Treatments:  none

Comments:

Diopside is an electric green mineral that is uncommon to find throughout the world in this size and quality.  Crystals such as this are known associate minerals of the tanzanite mining in the Merelani Hills of Arusha, Tanzania.

This thumbnailspecimen is great looking all around, showing parallel, prismatic faces on the front and sides, and an interesting, almost curved type of crystallization on the back.

There is some fracturing going on inside the crystal, but the outside is completely undamaged.  

The bottom of the specimen includes several sections of crystallized and massive graphite, which would have been at the attachment point of the crystal to its matrix.

This material can be hard to find, and is usually not cheap!  This is a great, and affordable example worthy of a high-end mineral collection.  Or just the window in your office!!