Courtesy of tradebit.com |
When a person of my age thinks about the element Boron his mind goes to Ronald Reagan (the actors last TV gig) and the TV series (in black and white) Death Valley Days. This western staple was sponsored by Pacific Coast Borax Company/U.S. Borax Company and ran on radio from 1930 until 1945 and TV from 1952 until 1970 with syndicated shows until1975. The show often featured a wagon in “Death Valley” using a 20-mule team (actually 18 mules led by two horses) pulling a load of “borax” to make a laundry additive (20 Mule Team Borax), Borateem (a laundry detergent), and Boraxo (a hand soap). My parents always had a can of “borax” on the lavatory to “deep clean” our hands (it could rub them raw).
A can of Borax had a space on the wash sink of many laboring men (and women) outside playing kids. For sale on Ebay. |
A hitched borax 20 mule team wagon. Photo Public Domain from National Park Service. |
In
the 1950s after my father purchased a green-screen Hoffman TV (at first, we received
but a single channel) we huddled around the big cabinet and always tuned in to hear
The Old Ranger introduce the show (Reagan came later). This was an extremely popular show (450+
episodes) and kids of my age always huddled together the following days to
discuss the previous episode. Not having
20 mules to work with, nor even one Shetland pony, we even tried a dog or two
to pull our wagons. Not much of a
success here.
The
miners at Death Valley were always hauling out borax (an actual mineral: Na2(B4O5)(OH)4-8H2O);
in reality there were a number of other evaporite minerals containing boron +
oxygen (boron oxyanions) that were hauled by the mules. Boron is an extremely
important mineral (besides laundry additives) in our industrial world. Besides the “natural” minerals, such as borax
or kernite, there are a host of synthesized compounds that are of critical
importance in a variety of uses, such as in semiconductors.
Elemental
boron just does not appear naturally on earth (evidently in some meteorites though). It usually appears in some sort of a compound
with oxygen (B + O) and often as BO3 with an oxidation state of
3-. The common borate minerals, for
example kernite, colemanite, and borax are evaporites and are not very
colorful. Other borates are more collectable
such as londonite and rhodizite (see Posting April 29, 2018).
The borate anion is very similar to the silicate anion and in some minerals the two share electrons. For example, the tourmaline group minerals are complex borosilicates and they certainly have color, and form in non-evaporate environments.
The borate anion is very similar to the silicate anion and in some minerals the two share electrons. For example, the tourmaline group minerals are complex borosilicates and they certainly have color, and form in non-evaporate environments.
One
of the more colorful boron minerals is dumortierite, a rather uncommon aluminum
borosilicate, (Al.Fe)7BO3(SiO4)3O3.
Although it may form nice slender crystals, most of the time the mineral is composed
of fibrous aggregates that generally are blue to violet in color (although
green, pink, brown and green colors sometimes appear). Dumortierite is
about as hard as quartz (7 Mohs), has a vitreous luster, and occurs both in
metamorphic and igneous rocks (aluminum and boron rich). Dumortierite fibers often occur with quartz
is a mass that is very hard and quite nice for cabochons. In a Posting on
April 17, 2013 I described a specimen that is mixture of dumortierite, quartz, a soft
clay-like mineral (probably pyrophyllite), and some other unidentified
minerals. This specimen was actually a lapidary slab whose relatives had
already been fashioned and mounted into really nice cabs.
A specimen of fibrous dumortierite mixed with quartz and covered by pyrophyllite? stained with iron. The upper portion is “fresh” dumortierite from a “break”. The slab is ~ 12 cm. in length. |
However,
there is another occurrence of dumortierite that crystal collectors appreciate
more than the fibrous variety and that is blue quartz. Blue is an interesting color for quartz since
all blue quartz is due to inclusions, unlike the purple amethyst or golden citrine
where trace elements replace some of the silica in the lattice work and produce
the colors. Inclusions producing blue
quartz include varieties of riebeckite, a sodium-rich amphibole and especially
the variety called blue asbestos or crocidolite; tourmaline; and dumortierite. With the coloring inclusions, some are
microscopic and are in a fine suspension that scatters the light (Willis–Tyndall
scattering) while others have larger inclusions scattered throughout the quartz
and impart their color.
As noted in these two photomicrographs, the saturation of blue coloring seems dependent on the intensity of my LED light source. |
The
following information on inclusions is abstracted from a fantastic web site, The
Quartz Page ( http://www.quartzpage.de/inc_text.html).
There are basically three ways inclusions can form in quartz:
There are basically three ways inclusions can form in quartz:
The
minerals form before the quartz. The growing quartz crystals engulfs them and
the original form of the included minerals is preserved. These inclusions are
called protogenetic. Included fibers than run through the entire crystal
at random orientations are typical examples.
Quartz
crystals and the included minerals grow simultaneously. These inclusions are
called syngenetic. The shape of the included minerals often deviates
from the typical forms and habits that develop during unhindered growth.
Crystals may be distorted beyond recognition.
Minerals
can be included by exsolution. When the conditions during crystal growth
allowed the incorporation of elements into the crystal lattice that are
incompatible with the crystal structure at different temperatures or pressures,
these elements may separate from the lattice to form new minerals once the
conditions change. Such inclusions are called epigenetic.
As
best that I can determine the quartz specimen I collected in Tucson has
protogenetic inclusions of dumortierite.
There seems to be a random orientation of slender, bladed, prismatic
crystals in the euhedral quartz crystals. Almost all specimens that resemble my specimen were collected
from the Vaca Morta quarry, Serra da Vereda, Boquira, Bahia, Brazil in 2014 or
later. The rocks at the mine are quartzites
and around 1.7-2.2 Ga (Precambrian) in age. If you spot a reasonably priced specimen you
might want to nab it--some specimens on the market today are priced in five
figures.
Check out this video: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=opening+lines+of+death+valley+days&&view=detail&mid=8BEB39114078B32D5F508BEB39114078B32D5F50&rvsmid=72FF78EA58F9E26626D072FF78EA58F9E26626D0&FORM=VDQVAP
Check out this video: https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=opening+lines+of+death+valley+days&&view=detail&mid=8BEB39114078B32D5F508BEB39114078B32D5F50&rvsmid=72FF78EA58F9E26626D072FF78EA58F9E26626D0&FORM=VDQVAP