Sorry, Iβm never on here.
Yes, fluorite can be replaced, and silica-dominant minerals are probably most common in doing this (see quartz ps. fluorite from Germany).
Would be hard to say whatβs happening with your sample without looking at it though.
27.09.2025 17:23
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Funky textures.
15.12.2024 16:20
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No, I mean minerals should not be named after people.
10.12.2024 19:57
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You canβt name things after yourself.
10.12.2024 19:57
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We should abolish eponymous mineral names.
10.12.2024 19:41
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Itβs less efficient than Iβd like, but Iβm slowly starting to pick up on the German.
09.12.2024 14:20
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I have to translate it but yes.
09.12.2024 13:00
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Getting my needed dose of 234-year-old drama.
09.12.2024 04:07
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I would guess itβs something that is going to need analysis to nail down for certain.
25.11.2024 19:26
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Not sure how helpful this is, but probably something hydrous based on the color change, and texture looks like a clay mineral.
22.11.2024 20:00
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I have received interesting mail.
22.11.2024 18:59
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Iβm quite sure this is somehow @jolyon.bsky.socialβs fault.
20.11.2024 20:20
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I havenβt opened this app in months and I have no idea whatβs happening here, but hi to all the folks who are following me?
20.11.2024 19:31
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If you find yourself intrigued by calcite crystallography, I strongly recommend browsing Goldschmidtβs Atlas Der Krystallformen, which has 150 pages of this.
Available to view here (log-in is required to view the PDF - but an account is free and easy!):
www.mindat.org/reference.ph...
11.09.2023 13:52
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When evaluating rocks for personal use, itβs not just about shape (although that better be gratifying).
Texture, strength, hardness, solubility (in water & acid) are all important considerations, occasionally along with more obscure characteristics like smell or stability under surface conditions.
10.05.2023 07:28
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My vote is for #adamite because of the adamite bat.
The bat is largely mummified but adamite has started to replace around its face - fluorescent light highlights the adamite.
Found by John Seibel, late 1980s at the Gold Hill Mine, Utah, collection of Mark Mitterman.
10.09.2023 01:02
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Same! π
09.09.2023 01:44
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Alfredo would love that.
07.09.2023 01:08
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Iβm pretty ambivalent here but Iβm gonna vote for #vivianite solely because of this excellent (and amusing) article, βA Scientific Study of the Absorption of Evil by Vivianiteβ by Alfredo Petrov:
www.mindat.org/article.php/...
07.09.2023 00:01
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Thank you!
06.09.2023 02:40
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I <3 pseudos!
06.09.2023 02:40
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This round is going to break my heart because #goethite is the only mineral in the bracket I REALLY like, and itβs going to get beat out by a mineral I canβt see.
Vote #goethite to make me wrong, and thus happy. π₯Ί
05.09.2023 23:41
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I have never heard that so Iβm going to go with no.
05.09.2023 01:18
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Itβs one of Australiaβs best, for sure.
05.09.2023 00:36
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Crocoite Plate from Adelaide Mine
A short film showing the planning and extraction of a plate of Crocoite from the Adelaide Mine in Dundas, Tasmania. Miners Bruce Stark and John Cornish have ...
If youβve ever wondered how miners get incredibly delicate specimens out of the ground, this crocoite extraction video is a good place to start. #TeamCrocoite #MinCup23
youtu.be/5_0noXIhIGg
05.09.2023 00:36
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Crocoite has an unusually frequent tendency to grow into such crystals so extremely hoppered that the crystals are HOLLOW.
Orange lead-chromium straws does it perfectly for me. π₯° #TeamCrocoite #MinCup23
www.mindat.org/photo-219055...
05.09.2023 00:17
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A wise decision! π
04.09.2023 19:22
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This is what happens when stibnite βrusts.β
I had to unpack a backpack full of rocks for the TSA over this specimen once, and the man was so, so very disappointed when we opened the box and Iβm still laughing about it.
04.09.2023 01:44
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Want an early start to #MinCup23? Read Howard Leeβs great article about U-Pb dating of zircons, and use of magnetic data to find out how surprisingly fast the Pilbara Craton was moving 2.7 billion-years ago. This incredible usefulness is why zircon is called the Time Lord. Expect more Time Lord soon
17.08.2023 02:08
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