- Sodalite
Infobox mineral
name = Sodalite
category =
boxwidth =
boxbgcolor =
caption = Sodalite of 7.5cm
formula =Sodium aluminium silicate withchlorine (Na4Al3(SiO4)3Cl)
color = Rich royal blue, green, yellow, violet, white veining common
habit = Massive; rarely dodecahedrons
system = Cubic
twinning =
cleavage = Dodecahedral (six directions), poor
fracture = Conchoidal to uneven - brittle
mohs = 5.5-6
luster = Dull vitreous to greasy
refractive = 1.48 - isotropic (sodium light)
opticalprop =
birefringence =
pleochroism = None - isotropic
streak = White
gravity = 2.27-2.33
melt =
fusibility = Easily to a colourless glass; sodium yellow flame
diagnostic =
solubility = Soluble in hydrochloric andnitric acid s
diaphaneity =
other =
var1 = Hackmanite | var1text = Tenebrescent; violet-red or green fading to whiteSodalite is a rich royal blue
mineral widely enjoyed as anornamental stone . Although massive sodalite samples are opaque, crystals are usually transparent to translucent. Sodalite is a member of the sodalite group and together withhauyne ,nosean andlazurite is a common constituent oflapis lazuli .Discovered in
1806 inGreenland , sodalite did not become important as an ornamental stone until1891 when vast deposits of fine material were discovered inOntario ,Canada . It has since been named Princess Blue after Princess Patricia who, upon visiting Ontario some time after its discovery, chose sodalite as interior decoration forMarlborough House inEngland .Properties
A light, relatively hard yet fragile mineral, sodalite is named after its
sodium content; inmineralogy it may be classed as afeldspathoid . Well known for its blue color, sodalite may also be grey, yellow, green, or pink and is often mottled with white veins or patches. The more uniformly blue material is used injewellery , where it is fashioned intocabochon s andbead s. Lesser material is more often seen as facing or inlay in various applications.Although very similar to
lazurite and lapis lazuli, sodalite is never quite comparable, being a royal blue rather thanultramarine . Sodalite also rarely containspyrite , a common inclusion in lapis. It is further distinguished from similar minerals by its white (rather than blue) streak. Sodalite's six directions of poor cleavage may be seen as incipient cracks running through the stone.Hackmanite is an important variety of sodalite exhibiting
tenebrescence . When hackmanite from Mont Saint-Hilaire (Quebec) or Ilímaussaq (Greenland) is freshly quarried, it is generally pale to deep violet but the colour fades quickly to greyish or greenish white. Conversely, hackmanite from Afghanistan and the Myanmar Republic (Burma) starts off creamy white but develops a violet to pink-red colour in sunlight. If left in a dark environment for some time, the violet will fade again. Tenebrescence is accelerated by the use of longwave or, particularly, shortwaveultraviolet light. Much sodalite will also fluoresce a patchy orange under UV light. (See also photochromism).Occurrence
Occurring typically in massive form, sodalite is found as vein fillings in plutonic
igneous rock s such asnepheline syenite s. It is associated with other minerals typical of undersaturated environments, namelyleucite ,cancrinite andnatrolite .Significant deposits of fine material are restricted to but a few locales:
Bancroft, Ontario andMont-Saint-Hilaire, Quebec inCanada ; andLitchfield, Maine andMagnet Cove, Arkansas in theUSA . The Ice River complex, nearGolden, British Columbia is recently being investigated for Sodalite recovery. Smaller deposits are found inSouth America (Brazil andBolivia ),Portugal ,Romania ,Burma andRussia . Hackmanite is found principally in Mont. Saint-Hilare andGreenland , the latter locale producing a green specimen nicknamed "chameleon sodalite."Euhedral, transparent crystals are found in northern
Namibia and in thelava s ofVesuvius ,Italy .See also
*
List of minerals
*List of minerals named after people References
* Hurlbut, Cornelius S.; Klein, Cornelis, 1985, Manual of Mineralogy, 20th ed., ISBN 0-471-80580-7
* [http://www.mindat.org/show.php?id=3701&ld=1&pho= Mindat with locations]
* [http://mineral.galleries.com/minerals/silicate/sodalite/sodalite.htm Mineral galleries]
* [http://www.webmineral.com/data/Sodalite.shtml Webmineral]
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