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TOURMALINE

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 104 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TOURMALINE  , a

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mineral of much
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interest to the physicist on account of its
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optical and electrical properties; it is also of some
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geological importance as a rock-constituent (see
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SCHORL), whilst certain transparent varieties have economic value as gem-stones . The name is probably a . corruption of turmali, or toramalli, the native name applied to tourmaline and
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zircon in
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Ceylon, whence specimens of the former mineral were brought to
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Europe by the Dutch in 1703 . The green tourmaline of Brazil had, however, been known here much earlier; and coarse varieties of the mineral had passed for centuries under the German name of Schorl, an old
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mining word of uncertain origin, possibly connected with the old German Schor (refuse), in allusion to the occurrence of the mineral with the waste of the tin-mines . The German
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village of Schorlau may have taken its name from the mineral . It has been suggested that the
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Swedish form skorl has possible connexion with the word skor, brittle . Tourmaline crystallizes in the
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rhombohedral division of the hexagonal
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system . The crystals have generally a prismatic habit, the prisms being longitudinally striated or even channelled . Trigonal prisms are characteristic, so that a transverse section becomes triangular or often nine-sided . By combination of several prisms the crystals may become sub-cylindrical . The crystals when doubly terminated are often
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hemimorphic or
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present dissimilar forms at the opposite ends; thus the hexagonal prisms in fig . I are terminated at one end by rhombohedral faces, o, P, and at the other by the basal
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plane k' . Doubly-terminated crystals, however, are comparatively rare ; the crystals being usually attached at one end to the
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matrix .

It is notable that prismatic crystals of tourmaline have in some cases been curved and fractured transversely; the displaced FIG . I. fragments having been cemented together by deposition of fresh mineral

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matter . Tourmaline is not infrequently columnar, acicular or fibrous; and the fibres may radiate from a centre so as to form the so-called " tourmaline suns." Crystals of tourmaline present no distinct cleavage, but break with a sub-conchoidal fracture; and whilst the general lustre of the mineral is vitreous, that of the fractured
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surface is rather pitchy . The hardness is slightly above that of
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quartz (7) . The specific gravity varies according to chemical composition, that of the colourless varieties being about 3, whilst in schorl it may rise to 3.2 . Tourmaline has a
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great range of colour, and in many cases the crystals are curiously parti-coloured . Occasionally, though rarely, the mineral is colourless, and is then known as achroite, a name proposed by R . Hermann in 1845, and derived from the Greek axpoos (uncoloured) . Red tourmaline, which when of
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fine colour is the most valued of all varieties, is known as
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rubellite (q.v.) . Green tourmaline is by no means uncommon, but the blue is rather rare and is distinguished by the name indigolite, generally written indicolite . Brown is a
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common colour, and black still more common, this being the usual colour of schorl, or common coarse tourmaline . Thin splinters of schorl may, however, be blue or brown by transmitted
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light .

The

double refraction of tourmaline is strong . The mineral is optically negative, the ordinary
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index being about 1.64, and the extraordinary 1.62 . Coloured tourmalines are intensely pleochroic, the ordinary ray, which vibrates perpendicular to the
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principal axis, being much more strongly absorbed than the extraordinary; hence a slice cut in the direction of the principal or optic axis transmits sensibly only the extraordinary ray, and may consequently be used as a polarizing
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medium . The brown tourmaline of Ceylon and Brazil is best adapted for this purpose, but the green is also used . Two plates properly mounted form the instrument used by opticians for testing spectacle-lenses, and are known as the " tourmaline tongs." In order to secure the best colour-effect when used as a gem-stone, the tourmaline should be cut with the table parallel to the optic axis . It was in tourmaline that the phenomenon of pyroelectricity was first observed . On being heated in peat ashes its attractive power was observed by the Dutch, in the early
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part of the 18th century; and this curious character obtained for it the name of aschtrekker, or ash-drawer . J . R . Hauy first pointed out the relation of pyroelectricity with hemimorphism . Tourmaline is also piezoelectric, that is, it becomes electric by pressure . If a crystal be subjected to pressure along the optic axis, it behaves as though it were contracting by reduction of temperature .

The mineral may also be rendered electric by

friction, and retains the charge for a long time . Tourmaline is a boro-silicate of singularly complex composition . Indeed the word tourmaline is sometimes regarded as the name of a
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group of isomorphous minerals rather than that of a definite
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species . Numerous analyses have been made, and the results discussed by a large number of authorities . In the view of S . L . Penfield and H . W . Foote all tourmaline may be derived from a boro-silicic acid of the formula H2nB25i4O21 . It is believed that the hydrogen is present as hydroxyl, and that this may be partially replaced by fluorine . The tourmaline acid has probably the constitution H1s(B•OH)2Si4O19 . Nine atoms of hydrogen are replaced by three of aluminium, and the remaining nine in part by other metals .

Lithium is present in red tourmaline; magnesium dominates in brown; iron, manganese and sometimes chromium are found in green; and much iron occurs in the black varieties . Four groups are sometimes recognized, characterized by the presence of (r) lithium, (2) ferrous iron, (3) ferric iron and (4) magnesium . Tourmaline occurs commonly in granite, greisen,
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gneiss and crystalline schists . In many cases it appears to have been formed by pneumatolysis, or the
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action on the rocks of heated vapours containing boron and fluorine, as in many tin-bearing districts, where tourmaline is a characteristic mineral . Near the margin of a mass of granite the rock often becomes schorlaceous or tourmaliniferous, and may pass into " tourmaline-rock," which is usually an aggregate of tourmaline and quartz . Tourmaline is an essential constituent of the west of England rocks called luxullianite (luxulyanite) and trowlesworthite . It occurs embedded in certain metamorphic limestones, where it is possibly due to fumarolic action . Microscopic crystals are common in clay-slate . By resistance to decomposition, tourmaline often survives the disintegration of the matrix, and thus passes into sands, clays, marls and other sedimentary deposits . Many of the finest crystals of tourmaline occur in druses in granitic rocks, such as those of
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San Piero in Elba, where some of the pale
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pink and green prisms are tipped with black, and have consequently been called " nigger-heads."
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Lepidolite is a common associate of tourmaline, as at Rozena in Moravia . Tourmaline occurs, with
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corundum, in the
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dolomite of Campolongo, in canton Ticino,
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Switzerland . Fine black crystals, associated with
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apatite and quartz, were formerly found in granite at Chudleigh, near Bovey Tracey in Devonshire .

The

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Russian localities for tourmaline are mentioned under RUBELLITE . Most of the tourmaline cut for jewelry comes from the gem-gravels of Ceylon . The green tourmaline has generally a yellowish or olive-green colour, and is known as " Ceylon
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chrysolite." Fine green crystals are found in Brazil, notably in the
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topaz-locality of Minas Novas; and when of vivid colour they have been called " Brazilian emeralds." Green tourmaline is a favourite ecclesiastical stone in South
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America Blue tourmaline occurs with the green; this variety is found also at Uto in Sweden (its
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original locality) and notably near
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Hazaribagh in Bengal . Certain kinds of
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mica occasionally contain flat crystals of tourmaline between the cleavage-planes . Many localities in the
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United States are famous for tourmaline . Magnificent specimens have been obtained from Mt Mica, near Paris, Maine, where the mineral was accidentally discovered in 182o by two students, E . L . Hamlin and E . Holmes . It occurs in granite, with lepidolite, smoky quartz,
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spodumene, &c.; and some of the prismatic crystals are notable for being red at one end and green at the other . Mt Rubellite at Hebron, and Mt Apatite at Auburn, are other localities in Maine which have yielded fine tourmaline . At .

Chesterfield, Massachusetts, remarkable crystals occur, some of which show on transverse section a triangular nucleus ofred tourmaline surrounded by a shell of green . Red and green tourmalines, with lepidolite and
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kunzite, are found in San Diego county, California . Fine coloured tourmalines occur at Haddam Neck,
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Connecticut; and excellent crystals of black tourmaline are well known from Pierrepont, New York, whilst remarkable brown crystals occur in
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limestone at Gouverneur in the same state .
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Canada is rich in tourmaline, notably at Burgess in
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Lanark county, Ontario, and at
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Grand Calumet Island in the
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Ottawa
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river . . Heemskirk Mountain,
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Tasmania, and
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Kangaroo Island, South
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Australia, have yielded fine coloured tourmaline
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fit for jewelry .
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Madagascar is a well-known locality for black tourmaline in large crystals . Many varieties of tourmaline have received distinctive names, some of which are noticed above . Dravite is G . Tschermak's name for a brown tourmaline, rich in
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magnesia but with little iron, occur-ring near Unter Drauburg in the Drave
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district in Carinthia . Taltalite was a name given by I . Domeyko to a mixture of tourmaline and copper ore from Taltal in Chile . The colourless Elba tourmaline was called apyrite by J .

F . L .

Hausmann, in allusion to its refractory behaviour before the blow-
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pipe; whilst a black iron-tourmaline from Norway was termed aphrazite by J . B. d'Andrada, in consequence of its intumescence when heated . (F . W . R .

End of Article: TOURMALINE
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