BERYL

 

Beryl is a beryllium aluminosilicate, Be3Al2(Si6O18).  It has a nonmetallic luster, forms sharp, hexagonal crystals, is very hard (H=7.5 to 8), and can be any color.  A frequently encountered color is pale bluish-green.  Beryl has a glassy luster and no obvious cleavage

 

Transparent beryls are gemstones.  The gem name depends on the color.

deep green = emerald

bluish = aquamarine

pink = morganite

rich yellow = golden beryl

red = bixbite

yellowish-green to pale greenish = heliodor

clear/colorless = goshenite

 

Beryl - two broken crystals (lower sample is 5.6 cm across) from a pegmatite in the Sao Francisco Craton's basement in southeastern Minas Gerais State, southeastern Brazil.

 


 

Emerald (chromiferous beryl) (green) + calcite (whitish) and pyrite (brassy gold) on black carbonaceous shale (3.6 cm across).  From the Muzo Hydrothermal Emerald Deposit (lower Carbonaceous Shale Member, Paja Formation, Aptian Stage, upper Lower Cretaceous) in the Muzo area, WSW of Chiquinquira, NNW of Bogotá, western Boyaca Department, northwest-central Colombia.

 


 

Emerald (chromiferous beryl) - large cluster from Russia (CM public display, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA).

 


 

Emeralds (green) in quartz matrix from Wenshan, China.  Dwyer Mercer County District Library collection, Celina, Ohio, USA.

 


 

Emerald (green) in matrix from Coscuez, Colombia.  Specimen owned by Stan & Pris Woollams.

 


 

Emerald from Brazil (public display, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, USA).

 


 

Aquamarine (upper crystal is 20 mm across) - they look clear, but the actual specimens are blue - very, very, very pale blue.  These come from a Precambrian, gem-bearing pegmatitic granite in the Jos Plateau of central Nigeria.

 


 

Aquamarine (public display, Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio, USA).

 


 

Aquamarine (Dwyer Mercer County District Library collection, Celina, Ohio, USA)

 


 

Aquamarine from Medina, Minas Gerais State, Brazil (Wayne State University specimen, Detroit, Michigan, USA).

 


 

Aquamarine from Shigar Valley, Pakistan.  (Wayne State University specimen, Detroit, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Morganite (manganiferous beryl) from Minas Gerais State, Brazil. (Cranbrook Institute of Science collection, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Morganite (manganiferous beryl) from California, USA (Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, USA).

 


 

Heliodor (beryl with uranium oxide as pigmentation agent).

 


 

Heliodor from the Murzinska Mine, Murzinska Pegmatite District, Urals, Russia.  (Wayne State University specimen, Detroit, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Goshenite from Teofilo Otoni, Minas Gerais State, Brazil.

(Wayne State University collection, Detroit, Michigan, USA)

 


 

Goshenite from Pakistan (public display, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, USA).

 


 

Photo gallery of beryl

 


 

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