Gahnite

Gahnite is one associated with the rarer people of the Spinel group of minerals. It is available at many zinc deposits worldwide. Crystals are typically very small, included and just translucent to opaque, but faceted gems are collectable due to their color and rarity. Present sources are Australia, Brazil, Germany, Italy, Namibia, Nigeria, Sweden, as well as in the united states in Sussex County, NJ-new jersey, Carroll County, Maryland, Mitchell County, North Carolina and Fremont County, Colorado.

Category: Oxide minerals
Spinel group
Spinel structural group
Chemical Formula: ZnAl2O4
Crystallography: Isometric – Hexoctahedral
Crystal Habit: Crystals typically octahedra, rarely as dodecahedra, may be modified, to 12 cm; also as exsolution lamellae in other minerals; granular, massive.
Twinning: On [111] as both twin and composition plane, common

 

Cleavage: [111] Indistinct
Fracture: Conchoidal also Irregular, Uneven
Tenacity: Brittle
Moh’s Hardness: 7.5 – 8.0
Density: 4.00 – 4.64 (g/cm3)
Luminescence: None
Radioactivity: Not Radioactive

 

Color: Dark Bluish Green, Grayish Green, Deep Green, Greenish Black, Bluish Black
Transparency: Transparent to Translucent
Luster: Vitreous (glassy)
Refractive Index: 1.82  Isotropic  (1.790 – 1.820 due to impurities)
Birefringence: 0.00  Isotropic
Dispersion: n/a
Pleochroism: n/a