LITHIA  PEGMATITE

 

The Pala Pegmatite of southern California is unusual for having pockets of lithium-rich minerals.  The samples shown below are lithia pegmatites consisting of grayish-purple lepidolite mica (KLi2Al(Al,Si)3O10(F,OH)2 - potassium lithium fluoro-hydroxy-aluminosilicate) and deep pink rubellite tourmaline (Na(Li,Al)3Al6(BO3)3Si6O18(OH)4 - sodium lithium hydroxy-boro-aluminosilicate).

 

The lithia pegmatites occur as pockets within the granitic Pala Pegmatite (Peninsula Ranges Batholith/Southern California Batholith).  The Pala Pegmatite was emplaced about 104-105 million years ago, during the Albian Stage of the late Early Cretaceous.

 

Locality: Stewart Mine, NNE of the town of Pala, northwestern San Diego County, southern California, USA (33¼ 22Õ 52Ó North latitude, 117¼ 03Õ 49Ó West longitude)

 

Lithia pegmatite (3.9 cm across) with deep purplish-pink rubellite tourmalines in a matrix of dark lavender lepidolite mica.

 


 

Lithia pegmatite (4.9 cm across) with radiating spray of dark pinkish rubellite tourmaline in a matrix of pale lavender lepidolite mica.

 


 

Lithia pegmatite with radiating clusters of dark pinkish rubellite tourmaline in lepidolite mica matrix.  (Colorado School of Mines Geology Museum, Golden, Colorado, USA)

 


 

 

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