Today was another short day on the observing/collecting
trail. In the last post I lamented about
participating in dump day, a
necessary but “not so fun” time---my least favorite day of the week. Today is my second least favorite day, but
one that is much more appealing to the sensory organs—laundry day! This particular
event always returns me, at least in my mind, to this dreaded day during my
college years. To be honest, I was
terrified the first few times when entering a self-service laundromat,
absolutely scared to death. Some of that fear continues today.
Before leaving for the freshman year in college my
mother tried to show me a few tips on the home washing machine about this
entire ordeal; however, most of her information just did not take with me. And, her machine was unlike anything I later observed
in the laundromat. Living in the
residence hall (a dorm back in the old days) I tried to be very frugal with my
clothes usage. However, the day finally
came on a Saturday—my roommate, also terrified of the monsters, suggested that
we head out to wash our clothes. Perhaps
he was unsatisfied with my cleanliness, perhaps he was just running out of
wearable material. At any rate, off we
went hoping to avoid meeting any females in the laundromat. We assumed that females knew all about the
washing process and we were greenhorns and did not want to show our lack of intelligence
about certain items. And besides, if
members of the opposite sex were around we surly would need to sort of hide our
“white clothes.”
Well, we picked the wrong time of the day for our
little chore since most of the machines were busy, and several college coeds
were present and seemly starring at us as we entered the dreaded building and put
our claim to three washing machines. My
roomie just dumped his bag, containing all sorts of colors and whites, into the
same machine. At least I knew enough to
stuff the colored material into one machine while sneaking the whites into another
washer. The next question revolved around
how much soap should we use? We had
purchased a large bottle of the cheapest laundry soap we could find at the store.
My buddy came to the conclusion that since we had cheap soap then more was
better. The machines were “top loaders”
so we poured in a generous amount, and then added a little more. We set the little button on “hot,” inserted
the coins and stepped back with a smug look on our face---we had challenged the
monsters and won, nothing to it---WRONG.
Big way wrong. As the machine
filled and the agitator began to whirl back and forth we noticed frothy bubbles
creeping out of the void around the lid, something like a rabid dog. A few
seconds later the bubbles turned into something like a volcano, pouring out of
the machine and heading to the floor. The monsters were unleashed—who let the
dogs out? Wow, what could we do as the machines would not shut down! Could we pull the plugs and dip out the suds? No, as the cords were hard-wired. Our faces grew very red as we grabbed for a
mop and spent the rest of the wash cycle trying to stem the river of soapy
water. The coeds, at least in our minds,
were laughing their heads off at two guys from the sticks.
That little episode in the laundromat scared me
forever and I still break into a cold sweat whenever I smell that particular odor
coming out of a building. Here in
Arizona, laundry day simply means getting a later start on tackling some of life’s
persistent questions. However, I am
pretty certain that laundromats left a vivid impression on many males of my generation.
Every year on a short day I try to visit a building on
Oracle Street that specializes in zeolites from India. This venue has the most amazing collections
of zeolite minerals, several of which are museum-quality specimens. I head to this store, not to purchase, but to
observe the displays of minerals collected from the basalt on the Deccan
Plateau. The Deccan Traps, as the basalt
is known, has produced some of the finest zeolite specimens in the world. At virtually any rock or mineral show there
are literally hundreds/thousands of Deccan zeolites for sale. The encasing basalt was extruded somewhere
around 65-66 Ma, right at the end of the Cretaceous. Today the volcanic hotspot may lie under the
Indian Ocean island of Reunion. As crustal
plates associated with the modern country of India passed over the hotspot on
its way north to collide with parts of Asia (producing the Himalaya Mountains) vast
quantities of basalt reached the surface.
And these basalt layers are rich in zeolites, a varied group of aluminosilicate
minerals.
A fine specimen of scolecite exhibiting several sprays
of elongated and acicular crystals.
Height ~25 cm.
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A large vug containing zeolite crystals, probably
stilbite/stellerite and others. This is
a very large “concretion” perhaps 1.2 M in length.
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Stalagmitic stilbite (I think) about ~30 cm in height.
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Sprays of mesolite (I think) sitting on top of another
zeolite, perhaps stilbite/stellerite.
These sprays are ~15 cm. high.
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A really giant vug (notice lamp) exposing at least two
different zeolites (stilbite/stellerite and others) in the center. This “concretion” is ~152 cm in length.
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I previously offered postings on a
few zeolites such as those collected at Table Mountain in Golden, Colorado, the
thomsonite nodules from Lake Superior and mordenite from the western US. However, identification of individual species
from this large group (~90) of minerals still confuses and sort of frightens me—sort
of like entering a laundromat!
So, what does one purchase while
looking at Indian zeolites? The obvious
answer this year would be blue cavansite, a hydrated calcium vanadium silicate Ca(VO)SiO4O10-4(H2O)
(and I purchased three specimens). One in
my collection is a nice specimen of stilbite crystals (may be stellerite)
perched on a base of heulandite, both are zeolites, with a dainty spray of tiny
blue crystals perched on the stilbite. The record of discovery goes to the
basalts cropping out in Malheur County, Oregon, but today most collector
specimens come from India. I suppose
that I may have missed cavansite in Mineralogy class since it was not reported
in the literature until 1967!
Cavansite spray perched on stilbite/stellerite with a base of heulandite. Width of entire specimen ~5.5 cm while width of spray ~7.5 mm. top is a photo while bottom is a photomicrograph. |
Cavansite usually appears as
radiating sprays, or balls, of prismatic dipyramidal crystals (Orthorhombic
System), blue in color, soft (3-4 Mohs), and with a vitreous luster. Cavansite
is a secondary mineral (probably low temperature) found in vugs of basalt. It
usually occurs with zeolite minerals but is not chemically related to that
group. It has a paramorph termed pentagonite (same chemical formula and color
but with bladed crystals) that seems to be a high temperature form.
So, although the day was short I saw some beautiful and spectacular zeolites and even made a frugal purchase of some nice blue minerals.
WHY IS THE SKY BLUE: A clear cloudless day-time sky is blue because molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset, we see red and orange colors because the blue light has been scattered out and away from the line of sight... Blue is the color between violet and green on the optical spectrum of visible light, Human eyes perceive blue when observing light with a wavelength between 450 and 495 nanometres.
From Dept. of Physics, University of Riverside, California,
So, although the day was short I saw some beautiful and spectacular zeolites and even made a frugal purchase of some nice blue minerals.
WHY IS THE SKY BLUE: A clear cloudless day-time sky is blue because molecules in the air scatter blue light from the sun more than they scatter red light. When we look towards the sun at sunset, we see red and orange colors because the blue light has been scattered out and away from the line of sight... Blue is the color between violet and green on the optical spectrum of visible light, Human eyes perceive blue when observing light with a wavelength between 450 and 495 nanometres.
From Dept. of Physics, University of Riverside, California,