Smoky quartz
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Smoky quartz is a brown to black, translucent variety of quartz. It ranges in clarity from almost complete transparency to almost-opaque black crystals. Smoky quartz is popular as a gemstone and as a collectible crystal.
Properties
Smoky quartz ranges in color from brown or smoky gray to a nearly opaque black. The color of smoky quartz is produced when natural gamma radiation, emitted from the surrounding rock, activates color centers around aluminum impurities within the crystalline quartz.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="mindat">Template:Cite web</ref> Smoky quartz is dichroic in polarized light and will fade in color if heated to above Template:Convert or exposed to UV light. It may turn a pale yellow color resembling citrine; some heat-treated smoky quartz is sold commercially as citrine.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Gamma irradiation can restore color to faded smoky quartz crystals. Smoky quartz crystals that grew in certain environments such as pegmatites and alpine fissures tend to be evenly colored, while crystals originating in other environments tend to exhibit color zoning or phantoms. In some crystals, the color may be darker near the edges.<ref name="mindat" />
Varieties
Morion is a very dark brown to black opaque variety of smoky quartz. Morion is also the German name for smoky quartz.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The name is from a misreading of mormorion in Pliny the Elder.<ref>New Oxford American Dictionary (2nd ed., 2005), p. 1102.</ref>
Cairngorm is a variety of smoky quartz found in the Cairngorm Mountains of Scotland.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> It usually has a smoky yellow-brown colour, though some specimens are greyish-brown. It is used in Scottish jewellery and as a decoration on kilt pins and the handles of Template:Lang (anglicised: sgian-dubhs or skean dhu).<ref>Template:Cite EB1911</ref>
Uses
Smoky quartz is common and was not historically important, but in recent times it has become a popular gemstone, especially for jewelry.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Sunglasses, in the form of flat panes of smoky quartz, were used in China in the 12th century.<ref>Joseph Needham, Science & Civilisation in China (Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1962), volume IV, part 1, page 121. Needham states that dark glasses were worn by Chinese judges to hide their facial expressions during court proceedings.</ref>
See also
References
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- Holden, Edward (1925). "The Cause of Color in Smoky Quartz and Amethyst" in American Mineralogist, vol. 9, pp. 203–252