Online Encyclopedia

RUBELLITE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 804 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RUBELLITE  , a red variety of

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tourmaline (q.v.) used as a gem-stone . It generally occurs crystallized on the walls of cavities in coarse granitic rocks, where it is often associated with a
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pink lithia-
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mica (
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lepidolite) . The most valued kinds are deep red; the colour being probably due to the presence of manganese . Some of the finest rubellite is found in
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Siberia, whence it is sometimes called siberite, or passes under the misleading name of " Siberian ruby." The mills at
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Ekaterinburg, where it is cut and polished, draw most of their supplies from the Ural Mountains—chiefly from Mursinka, Sarapulskaya and Shaitanka, near Ekaterinburg—but specimens are occasionally found at Nerchinsk in Transbaikalia .
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Burma is famous for rubellite, but little was known as to the conditions of its occurrence there until after the
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British annexation, when the old workings were visited and described by C . Barrington Brown and by F . Noetling . The pits which yield rubellite are dug in alluvial deposits in the Mong-long valley, some miles to the S.E. of Mogok, the centre of the ruby country . It was here that the Chinese obtained the rubellite so much valued in
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China for buttons of the caps of mandarins of certain rank . In the British Museum there is a remarkable specimen of crystallized rubellite of large
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size and
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fine form, but of poor colour, which was presented by the king of
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Ava to Colonel Michael Symes on the occasion of his
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mission in 1795 . Very fine rubellite is found in the
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United States, notably at Mount Mica, near Paris, Oxford Co., Maine, where the crystals are often red at one end and green at the other . Mount Rubellite, near Hebron, and Mount
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Apatite at Auburn, are other localities in the same state from which fine specimens are obtained .

Chesterfield and
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Goshen, Mass., also yield red tourmaline, frequently associated with green in the same crystal . Pink tourmaline also occurs, with lepidolite and
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kunzite, in
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San Diego Co., California . In
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Europe rubellite occurs sparingly at a few localities, as at San Piero in Elba and at Penig in Saxony; but the
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mineral is rarely if ever
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fit for the
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lapidary . (F . W .

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PETER PAUL RUBENS (1577-164o)

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